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+The Project Gutenberg eBook, Bruges and West Flanders, by George W. T.
+Omond, Illustrated by Amédée Forestier
+
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+
+
+
+Title: Bruges and West Flanders
+
+
+Author: George W. T. Omond
+
+
+
+Release Date: June 23, 2006 [eBook #18670]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
+
+
+***START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK BRUGES AND WEST FLANDERS***
+
+
+E-text prepared by Robert J. Hall
+
+
+
+Note: Project Gutenberg also has an HTML version of this
+ file which includes the original illustrations.
+ See 18670-h.htm or 18670-h.zip:
+ (https://www.gutenberg.org/dirs/1/8/6/7/18670/18670-h/18670-h.htm)
+ or
+ (https://www.gutenberg.org/dirs/1/8/6/7/18670/18670-h.zip)
+
+
+
+
+
+BRUGES AND WEST FLANDERS
+
+Painted by
+
+AMÉDÉE FORESTIER
+
+Described by
+
+G. W. T. OMOND
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+[Illustration: A FLEMISH COUNTRY GIRL]
+
+
+
+
+Preface
+
+There is no part of Europe more wanting in what is known as 'scenery'
+than Flanders; and those who journey there must spend most of their
+time in the old towns which are still so strangely mediæval in
+their aspect, or in country places which are worth seeing only
+because of their connection with some event in history--Nature
+has done so little for them. Thus the interest and the attraction
+of Flanders and the Flemish towns are chiefly historical. But it
+would be impossible to compress the history of such places as Bruges,
+Ypres, Furnes, or Nieuport within the limits of a few pages, except
+at the cost of loading them with a mass of dry facts. Accordingly
+the plan adopted in preparing the letterpress which accompanies Mr.
+Forestier's drawings has been to select a few leading incidents,
+and give these at some length.
+
+The Flemish School of Painting and Architecture has been so well
+and frequently described that it would have been mere affectation
+to make more than a few passing allusions to that topic.
+
+Some space has, however, been devoted to an account of the recent
+development of the Flemish littoral, which has been so remarkable
+during the last quarter of a century.
+
+
+
+
+Contents
+
+CHAPTER I
+
+THE MARKET-PLACE AND BELFRY--EARLY HISTORY OF BRUGES
+
+CHAPTER II
+
+BALDWIN BRAS-DE-FER--THE PLACE DU BOURG--MURDER OF CHARLES THE GOOD
+
+CHAPTER III
+
+THE BÉGUINAGE--CHURCHES--THE RELIC OF THE HOLY BLOOD
+
+CHAPTER IV
+
+THE BRUGES MATINS--BATTLE OF THE GOLDEN SPURS
+
+CHAPTER V
+
+DAMME--THE SEA-FIGHT AT SLUIS--SPLENDOUR OF BRUGES IN THE MIDDLE
+AGES--THE FALL AND LOSS OF TRADE
+
+CHAPTER VI
+
+'BRUGES LA MORTE'
+
+CHAPTER VII
+
+THE PLAIN OF WEST FLANDERS--YPRES
+
+CHAPTER VIII
+
+FURNES--THE PROCESSION OF PENITENTS
+
+CHAPTER IX
+
+NIEUPORT--THE BATTLE OF THE DUNES
+
+CHAPTER X
+
+THE COAST OF FLANDERS
+
+CHAPTER XI
+
+COXYDE--THE SCENERY OF THE DUNES
+
+INDEX
+
+
+
+
+List of Illustrations
+
+ 1. A Flemish Country Girl
+ 2. Bruges: A Corner of the Market on the Grand' Place
+ 3. Bell-ringer Playing a Chime
+ 4. Bruges: Porte d'Ostende
+ 5. Bruges: Rue de l'Âne Aveugle (showing end of Town
+ Hall and Bridge connecting it with Palais de
+ Justice)
+ 6. Bruges: Quai du Rosaire
+ 7. Bruges: The Béguinage
+ 8. Bruges: Quai des Marbriers
+ 9. A Flemish Young Woman
+ 10. A Flemish Burgher
+ 11. Bruges: Quai du Miroir
+ 12. Bruges: View of the Palais du Franc.
+ 13. Bruges: Maison du Pélican (Almshouse)
+ 14. Bruges: Vegetable Market
+ 15. The Flemish Plain
+ 16. Duinhoek: Interior of a Farmhouse
+ 17. Adinkerque: At the Kermesse
+ 18. A Farmsteading
+ 19. Ypres: Place du Musée (showing Top Part of the
+ Belfry)
+ 20. Ypres: Arcade under the Nieuwerk
+ 21. Furnes: Grand' Place and Belfry
+ 22. Furnes: Peristyle of Town Hall and Palais de Justice
+ 23. Nieuport: Interior of Church
+ 24. Furnes: Tower of St. Nicholas
+ 25. Furnes: In Ste. Walburge's Church
+ 26. Nieuport: A Fair Parishioner
+ 27. Nieuport: Hall and Vicarage
+ 28. Nieuport: The Quay, with Eel-boats and Landing-stages
+ 29. Nieuport: The Town Hall
+ 30. Nieuport: Church Porch (Evensong)
+ 31. The Dunes: A Stormy Evening
+ 32. An Old Farmer
+ 33. La Panne: Interior of a Flemish Inn
+ 34. La Panne: A Flemish Inn--Playing Skittles
+ 35. Coxyde: A Shrimper on Horseback
+ 36. Coxyde: A Shrimper
+ 37. Adinkerque: Village and Canal
+
+
+
+
+THE MARKET-PLACE AND BELFRY--EARLY HISTORY OF BRUGES
+
+
+
+
+BRUGES AND WEST FLANDERS
+
+CHAPTER I
+
+THE MARKET-PLACE AND BELFRY--EARLY HISTORY OF BRUGES
+
+Every visitor to 'the quaint old Flemish city' goes first to the
+Market-Place. On Saturday mornings the wide space beneath the mighty
+Belfry is full of stalls, with white canvas awnings, and heaped up
+with a curious assortment of goods. Clothing of every description,
+sabots and leathern shoes and boots, huge earthenware jars, pots
+and pans, kettles, cups and saucers, baskets, tawdry-coloured
+prints--chiefly of a religious character--lamps and candlesticks,
+the cheaper kinds of Flemish pottery, knives and forks, carpenters'
+tools, and such small articles as reels of thread, hatpins, tape,
+and even bottles of coarse scent, are piled on the stalls or spread
+out on the rough stones wherever there is a vacant space. Round
+the stalls, in the narrow spaces between them, the people move
+about, talking, laughing, and bargaining. Their native Flemish
+is the tongue they use amongst themselves; but many of them speak
+what passes for French at Bruges, or even a few words of broken
+English, if some unwary stranger from across the Channel is rash
+enough to venture on doing business with these sharp-witted, plausible
+folk.
+
+At first sight this Market-Place, so famed in song, is a disappointment.
+The north side is occupied by a row of seventeenth-century houses
+turned into shops and third-rate cafés. On the east is a modern
+post-office, dirty and badly ventilated, and some half-finished
+Government buildings. On the west are two houses which were once
+of some note--the Cranenburg, from the windows of which, in olden
+times, the Counts of Flanders, with the lords and ladies of their
+Court, used to watch the tournaments and pageants for which Bruges
+was celebrated, and in which Maximilian was imprisoned by the burghers
+in 1488; and the Hôtel de Bouchoute, a narrow, square building
+of dark red brick, with a gilded lion over the doorway. But the
+Cranenburg, once the 'most magnificent private residence in the
+Market-Place,' many years ago lost every trace of its original
+splendour, and is now an unattractive hostelry, the headquarters
+of a smoking club; while the Hôtel de Bouchoute, turned into a
+clothier's shop, has little to distinguish it from its commonplace
+neighbours. Nevertheless,
+
+ 'In the Market-Place of Bruges stands the Belfry old and brown;
+ Thrice consumed and thrice rebuilded, still it watches o'er the town.'
+
+It redeems the Market-Place from mediocrity. How long ago the first
+belfry tower of Bruges was built is unknown, but this at least
+is certain, that in the year 1280 a fire, in which the ancient
+archives of the town perished, destroyed the greater part of an
+old belfry, which some suppose may have been erected in the ninth
+century. On two subsequent occasions, in the fifteenth and eighteenth
+centuries, the present Belfry, erected on the ruins of the former
+structure, was damaged by fire; and now it stands on the south side
+of the Market-Place, rising 350 feet above the Halles, a massive
+building of the thirteenth and fourteenth centuries, solemn,
+weather-beaten, and majestic. 'For six hundred years,' it has been
+said, 'this Belfry has watched over the city of Bruges. It has
+beheld her triumphs and her failures, her glory and her shame,
+her prosperity and her gradual decay, and, in spite of so many
+vicissitudes, it is still standing to bear witness to the genius
+of our forefathers, to awaken memories of old times and admiration
+for one of the most splendid monuments of civic architecture which
+the Middle Ages has produced.'[*]
+
+[Footnote *: Gilliat-Smith, _The Story of Bruges_, p. 169 (Dent
+and Co., London, 1901). Mr. Gilliat-Smith's book is a picturesque
+account of Bruges in the Middle Ages. Of the English works relating
+to Bruges, there is nothing better than Mr. Wilfrid Robinson's
+_Bruges, an Historical Sketch_, a short and clear history, coming
+down to modern times (Louis de Plancke, Bruges, 1899).]
+
+In olden times watchmen were always on duty on the Belfry to give
+warning if enemies approached or fire broke out in any part of the
+town, a constant source of danger when most of the houses were
+built of wood. Even in these more prosaic days the custom of keeping
+watch and ward unceasingly is still maintained, and if there is a
+fire, the alarum-bell clangs over the city. All day, from year's
+end to year's end, the chimes ring every quarter of an hour; and
+all night, too, during the wildest storms of winter, when the wind
+shrieks round the tower; and in summer, when the old town lies
+slumbering in the moonlight.
+
+[Illustration: BRUGES. A corner of the Market on the Grand' Place.]
+
+From the top of the Belfry one looks down on what is practically
+a mediæval city. The Market-Place seems to lose its modern aspect
+when seen from above; and all round there is nothing visible but
+houses with high-pointed gables and red roofs, intersected by canals,
+and streets so narrow that they appear to be mere lanes. Above
+these rise, sometimes from trees and gardens, churches, convents,
+venerable buildings, the lofty spire of Notre Dame, the tower of
+St. Sauveur, the turrets of the Gruthuise, the Hospital of St. John,
+famous for its paintings by Memlinc, the Church of Ste. Elizabeth in
+the grove of the Béguinage, the pinnacles of the Palais du Franc,
+the steep roof of the Hôtel de Ville, the dome of the Couvent des
+Dames Anglaises, and beyond that to the east the slender tower which
+rises above the Guildhouse of the Archers of St. Sebastian. The walls
+which guarded Bruges in troublous times have disappeared, though
+five of the old gateways remain; but the town is still contained
+within the limits which it had reached at the close of the thirteenth
+century.
+
+Behind the large square of the Halles, from which the Belfry rises,
+is the Rue du Vieux Bourg, the street of the Ouden Burg, or old
+fort; and to this street the student of history must first go if
+he wishes to understand what tradition, more or less authentic,
+has to say about the earliest phases in the strange, eventful past
+of Bruges. The wide plain of Flanders, the northern portion of the
+country which we now call Belgium, was in ancient times a dreary
+fenland, the haunt of wild beasts and savage men; thick, impenetrable
+forests, tracts of barren sand, sodden marshes, covered it; and
+sluggish streams, some whose waters never found their way to the
+sea, ran through it. One of these rivulets, called the Roya, was
+crossed by a bridge, to defend which, according to early tradition,
+a fort, or 'burg,' was erected in the fourth century. This fort
+stood on an islet formed by the meeting of the Roya with another
+stream, called the Boterbeke, and a moat which joined the two. We
+may suppose that near the fort, which was probably a small building
+of rough stones, or perhaps merely a wooden stockade, a few huts
+were put up by people who came there for protection, and as time
+went on the settlement increased. 'John of Ypres, Abbot of St.
+Bertin,' says Mr. Robinson, 'who wrote in the fourteenth century,
+describes how Bruges was born and christened: "Very soon pedlars
+began to settle down under the walls of the fort to supply the
+wants of its inmates. Next came merchants, with their valuable
+wares. Innkeepers followed, who began to build houses, where those
+who could not find lodging in the fort found food and shelter.
+Those who thus turned away from the fort would say, 'Let us go to
+the bridge.' And when the houses near the bridge became so numerous
+as to form a town, it kept as its proper name the Flemish word
+_Brugge_."
+
+[Illustration: BELL-RINGER PLAYING A CHIME.]
+
+The small island on which this primitive township stood was bounded
+on the south and east by the Roya, on the north by the Boterbeke,
+and on the west by the moat joining these two streams. The Roya
+still flows along between the site of the old burg and an avenue
+of lime-trees called the Dyver till it reaches the end of the Quai
+du Rosaire, when it turns to the north. A short distance beyond
+this point it is vaulted over, and runs on beneath the streets
+and houses of the town. The Rue du Vieux Bourg is built over the
+course of the Boterbeke, which now runs under it and under the Belfry
+(erected on foundations sunk deep into the bed of the stream), until
+it joins the subterranean channel of the Roya at the south-east
+corner of the Market-Place. The moat which joined these two streams
+and guarded the west side of the island was filled up long ago,
+and its bed is now covered by the Rue Neuve, which connects the
+Rue du Vieux Bourg with the Dyver.
+
+Thus the boundaries of early Bruges can easily be traced; but nothing
+remains of the ancient buildings, though we read of a warehouse,
+booths, and a prison, besides the dwelling-houses of the townsfolk.
+The elements, at least, of civic life were there; and tradition
+says that in or near the village, for it was nothing more, some
+altars of the Christian faith were set up during the seventh and
+eighth centuries. Trade, too, soon began to flourish, and grew
+rapidly as the population of the place increased. The Roya, flowing
+eastwards, fell into the Zwijn, an arm of the sea, which then ran
+up close to the town, and on which stood Damme, now a small inland
+village, but once a busy port crowded with shipping. The commercial
+life of Bruges depended on the Zwijn; and that much business was
+done before the close of the ninth century is shown by the fact
+that Bruges had then a coinage of its own.[*] It was from such
+small beginnings that this famous, 'Venice of the North' arose.
+
+[Footnote *: Gilliodts van Severen, _Bruges Ancienne et Moderne_,
+pp. 7, 8, 9.]
+
+[Illustration: BRUGES. Porte d'Ostende.]
+
+
+
+
+BALDWIN BRAS-DE-FRE--THE PLACE DU BOURG--MURDER OF CHARLES THE GOOD
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER II
+
+BALDWIN BRAS-DE-FER--THE PLACE DU BOURG--MURDER OF CHARLES THE GOOD
+
+Towards the end of the ninth and at the beginning of the tenth
+century great changes took place on the banks of the Roya, and
+the foundations of Bruges as we know it now were laid. Just as
+in the memorable years 1814 and 1815 the empire of Napoleon fell
+into fragments, and princes and statesmen hastened to readjust the
+map of Europe in their own interests, so in the ninth century the
+empire of Charlemagne was crumbling away; and in the scramble for
+the spoils, the Normans carried fire and sword into Flanders. Charles
+the Bald, King of the Franks, at this crisis called to his aid the
+strong arm of Baldwin, a Flemish chief of whose ancestry we know
+little, but who soon became famous as Baldwin Bras-de-Fer--Baldwin
+of the Iron Arm, so called because, in peace or war, he was never
+seen without his coat of mail. This grim warrior had fallen in
+love with the daughter of Charles the Bald, Judith, who had been
+already twice married, first to the Saxon King Ethelwulf (after
+the death of his first wife Osberga, mother of Alfred the Great) and
+secondly to Ethelbald, on whose death she left England and went
+to live at Senlis. Baldwin persuaded the Princess to run away with
+him; and they were married without the knowledge of her father, to
+escape whose vengeance the culprits fled to Rome. Pope Nicholas I.
+brought about a reconciliation; and Charles not only pardoned his
+son-in-law, but appointed him ruler of Flanders under the title of
+Marquis, which was afterwards changed into that of Count. It is to
+the steel-clad Baldwin Bras-de-Fer that the Counts of Flanders trace
+the origin of their title; and he was, moreover, the real founder of
+that Bruges which rose to such glory in the Middle Ages, and is
+still, though fallen from its high estate, the picturesque capital
+of West Flanders, whither artists flock to wander about amidst the
+canals and bridges, the dismantled ramparts, the narrow streets
+with their curious houses, and the old buildings which bear such
+eloquent testimony to the ruin which long ago overtook what was
+once an opulent and powerful city.
+
+When the wrath of his father-in-law had been appeased, Baldwin, now
+responsible for the defence of Flanders, came to Bruges with his
+wife, and there established his Court. But the old burg, it seems,
+was not thought capable of holding out against the Normans, who
+could easily land on the banks of the Zwijn; and Baldwin, therefore,
+set about building a new stronghold on the east side of the old
+burg, and close to it. It was surrounded partly by the main stream
+of the Roya, and partly by backwaters flowing from it. Here he
+built a fortress for himself and his household, a church dedicated
+to St. Donatian, a prison, and a 'ghiselhuis,' or house for the
+safe keeping of hostages. The whole was enclosed by walls, built
+close to the edge of the surrounding waters.
+
+The Roya is now vaulted over where it ran along the west side of
+Baldwin's stronghold, separating it from the original burg, and
+the watercourses which defended it on the north and east are filled
+up; but the stream on the south still remains in the shape of the
+canal which skirts the Quai des Marbriers, from which a bridge
+leads by a narrow lane, called the Rue de l'Âne Aveugle, under
+an arch of gilded stonework, into the open space now known as the
+Place du Bourg. Here we are at the very heart of Bruges, on the
+ground where Baldwin's stronghold stood, with its four gates and
+drawbridges, and the high walls frowning above the homes of the
+townsmen clustering round them. The aspect of the place is completely
+changed since those early days. A grove of chestnut-trees covers
+the site of the Church of St. Donatian; not a stone remains of
+Bras-de-Fer's rude palace; and instead of the prison and the
+hostage-house, there are the Hôtel de Ville, now more than five
+hundred years old, from whose windows the Counts of Flanders swore
+obedience to the statutes and privileges of the town, the Palais
+de Justice, and the dark crypt beneath the chapel which shelters
+the mysterious Relic of the Holy Blood.
+
+[Illustration: BRUGES. Rue de l'Âne Aveugle (showing end of Town
+Hall and Bridge connecting it with Palais de Justice).]
+
+In summer it is a warm, quiet, pleasant spot. Under the shade of
+the trees, near the statue of Van Eyck, women selling flowers sit
+beside rows of geraniums, roses, lilies, pansies, which give a
+touch of bright colour to the scene. Artists from all parts of
+Europe set up their easels and paint. Young girls are gravely busy
+with their water-colours. Black-robed nuns and bare-footed Carmelites
+pass silently along. Perhaps some traveller from America opens his
+guide-book to study the map of a city which had risen to greatness
+long before Columbus crossed the seas. A few English people hurry
+across, and pass under the archway of the Rue de l'Âne Aveugle
+on the way to their tennis-ground beyond the Porte de Gand. The
+sunshine glitters on the gilded façade of the Palais de Justice,
+and lights up the statues in their niches on the front of the Hôtel
+de Ville. There is no traffic, no noise. Everything is still and
+peaceful. The chimes, ever and anon ringing out from the huge Belfry,
+which rises high above the housetops to the west, alone break the
+silence.
+
+This is Bruges sleeping peacefully in old age, lulled to rest by
+the sound of its own carillon. But it is easy, standing there, to
+recall the past, and to fancy the scenes which took place from time
+to time throughout the long period of foreign danger and internal
+strife. We can imagine the Bourg, now so peaceful, full of armed
+men, rushing to the Church of St. Donatian on the morning when
+Charles the Good was slain; how, in later times, the turbulent
+burghers, fiery partisans of rival factions, Clauwerts shouting
+for the Flemish Lion, and Leliarts marshalled under the Lily of
+France, raged and threatened; how the stones were splashed with blood
+on the day of the Bruges Matins, when so many Frenchmen perished; or
+what shouts were raised when the Flemish host came back victorious
+from the Battle of the Golden Spurs.
+
+Though every part of Bruges--not only the Bourg, but the great
+Market-Place, and the whole maze of streets and lanes and canals
+of which it consists--has a story of its own, some of these stories
+stand out by themselves; and amongst these one of the most dramatic
+is the story of the death of Charles the Good.
+
+More than two hundred and fifty years had passed away since the
+coming of Baldwin Bras-de-Fer; Bruges had spread far beyond the
+walls of the Bourg; and Charles, who had succeeded his cousin Baldwin
+VII., was Count of Flanders. He was called 'the Good' because of
+his just rule and simple life, and still more, perhaps, because
+he clothed and fed the poor--not only in Bruges, but throughout
+all Flanders. The common people loved him, but his charities gave
+offence to the rich. He had, moreover, incurred the special enmity
+of the Erembalds, a powerful family, who, though not of noble origin
+themselves, were connected by marriage with many noble houses. They
+had supported his claim to the throne of Flanders, which had been
+disputed, and he had rewarded their services by heaping favours
+on them. But, after a time, they began to oppose the methods of
+government which Charles applied to Flanders. They resented most
+of all one of his decrees which made it unlawful for persons not
+in his service to carry arms in time of peace. This decree, which
+was pronounced in order to prevent the daily scenes of violence
+which Charles abhorred, was declared by the Erembalds to be an
+interference with Flemish liberty. It did not affect them personally,
+for they held office under the Count; but they none the less opposed
+it vehemently.
+
+While Charles was thus on bad terms with the Erembalds, a deadly
+feud existed between them and the Straetens, another notable family,
+which grew to such a height that the rival clans made open war upon
+each other, pillaging, burning, and slaying after the manner of
+these times. Charles called the leaders of both sides before him,
+and made them swear to keep the peace; but when he was at Ypres in
+the autumn of 1126, a complaint was laid before him that Bertulf,
+head of the Erembalds, who was also Provost of St. Donatian's,
+had sent one of his nephews, Burchard by name, on a raid into the
+lands of the Straetens, whose cattle he had carried off. On hearing
+of this outrage, Charles gave orders that Burchard's house should
+be pulled down, and that he should compensate the Straetens for
+their losses. The Erembalds were powerless to resist this order,
+and Burchard's house was razed to the ground.
+
+It has been said that this was only the beginning of strong measures
+which Charles was about to take against the Erembalds; but there
+is no certainty as to what his intentions really were. He then
+lived in the Loove, a mansion which he had built in the Bourg at
+Bruges, on the site now occupied by the Palais de Justice; and
+there, on his return from Ypres, he had a meeting with some of the
+Erembalds, who had been sent to plead on behalf of Burchard. As
+to what took place at this interview there is some doubt. According
+to one account, Charles drank wine with the delegates, and granted
+a free pardon to Burchard, on condition that he kept the peace.
+According to another account, his demeanour was so unbending that
+the Erembalds left his presence full of angry suspicions, which
+they communicated to their friends. Whatever may have happened,
+they were bent on mischief. Burchard was sent for, and a secret
+consultation was held, after which Burchard and a chosen few assembled
+in a house on the Bourg and arranged their plans. This was on the
+night of March 1, 1127.
+
+[Illustration: BRUGES. Quai du Rosaire.]
+
+At break of day next morning a cold, heavy mist hung low over Bruges,
+and in the Bourg everything was shrouded in darkness. But already
+some poor men were waiting in the courtyard of the Loove, to whom
+Charles gave alms on his way to early Mass in the Church of St.
+Donatian. Then he went along a private passage which led into the
+church, and knelt in prayer before the Lady Altar. It was his custom
+to give help to the needy when in church, and he had just put some
+money into the hands of a poor woman, when suddenly she called out:
+'Beware, Sir Count!' He turned quickly round, and there, sword
+in hand, was Burchard, who had stolen up the dim aisle to where
+Charles was kneeling. The next moment Burchard struck, and Charles
+fell dead upon the steps of the altar.
+
+Then followed a scene of wild confusion. The woman ran out into
+the Bourg, calling loudly that the Count was slain. In the midst
+of the uproar some of the royal household fled in terror, while
+others who entered the church were butchered by the Erembalds,
+who next attacked the Loove, and, having pillaged it, rushed over
+Bruges, slaughtering without mercy all who dared to oppose them.
+
+After some time one of the Count's servants ventured to cover the
+dead body with a winding-sheet, and to surround it with lighted
+tapers; and there it remained lying on the pavement, until at last
+the Erembalds, who were afraid to bury it in Bruges lest the sight
+of the tomb of Charles the Good should one day rouse the townsmen
+to avenge his death, sent a message to Ghent, begging the Abbot
+of St. Peter's to take it away and bury it in his own church. The
+Abbot came to Bruges, and before dawn the body of the murdered Count
+was being stealthily carried along the aisles of St. Donatian's,
+when a great crowd rushed in, declaring that the bones of Charles
+must be allowed to rest in peace at Bruges. The arches rang with
+cries, chairs were overturned, stools and candlesticks were thrown
+about, as the people, pressing and struggling round the Abbot and
+his servants, told Bertulf, with many an oath, that he must yield
+to their wishes. At last the Provost submitted, and on the morrow,
+just two days after the murder, the body of Charles was buried before
+the Lady Altar, on the very spot, it is said, where the statue of
+Van Eyck now stands under the trees in the Bourg.
+
+The triumph of the Erembalds was short, for the death of Charles
+the Good was terribly avenged by his friends, who came to Bruges
+at the head of a large force. A fierce struggle took place at the
+Rue de l'Âne Aveugle, where many were slain. The Erembalds were
+driven into the Bourg, the gates of which they shut; but an entrance
+was forced, and, after desperate fighting, some thirty of them, all
+who remained alive, were compelled to take refuge, first in the
+nave and then in the tower of the Church of St. Donatian, where,
+defending themselves with the courage of despair, they made a last
+stand, until, worn out by fatigue and hunger, they surrendered
+and came down. Bertulf the Provost, Burchard, and a few of the
+other ringleaders had fled some days before, and so escaped, for
+a time at least, the fate of their companions, who, having been
+imprisoned in a dungeon, were taken to the top of the church tower
+and flung down one by one on to the stones of the Bourg. 'Their
+bodies,' says Mr. Gilliat-Smith, 'were thrown into a marsh beyond
+the village of St. André, and for years afterwards no man after
+nightfall would willingly pass that way.' In the Church of St.
+Sauveur there is a costly shrine containing what are said to be the
+bones of Charles the Good, taken from their first resting-place,
+at which twice every year a festival is held in commemoration of
+his virtues.
+
+
+
+
+THE BÉGUINAGE--CHURCHES--THE RELIC OF THE HOLY BLOOD
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER III
+
+THE BÉGUINAGE--CHURCHES--THE RELIC OF THE HOLY BLOOD
+
+Bruges is one of the most Catholic towns in Catholic Flanders.
+Convents and religious houses of all sorts have always flourished
+there, and at present there are no less than forty-five of these
+establishments. Probably one of the most interesting to English
+people is the Couvent des Dames Anglaises, which was founded in
+1629 by the English Augustinian Nuns of Ste. Monica's Convent at
+Louvain. Its chapel, with a fine dome of the eighteenth century,
+contains a beautiful altar built of marbles brought from Egypt,
+Greece, and Persia; and amongst its possessions is the rosary of
+Catherine of Braganza (Queen of Charles II. of England), who died
+at Bruges.
+
+And then there is the Béguinage. There are Béguinages at Amsterdam
+and Breda, but with this exception of Holland, Belgium is now the
+only country in Europe where these societies, the origin of whose
+name is uncertain, are to be found. They consist of spinsters or
+widows, who, though bound by a few conventual oaths during their
+connection with the society, may return to the world. On entering
+each sister pays a sum of money to the general funds, and at first
+lives for a time along with other novices. At the end of this term
+of probation they are at liberty to occupy one of the small dwellings
+within the precincts of the Béguinage, and keep house for themselves.
+They spend their time in sewing, making lace, educating poor children,
+visiting the sick, or any form of good works for which they may
+have a taste. They are under a Mother Superior, the 'Grande Dame,'
+appointed by the Bishop of the diocese, and must attend the services
+in the church of their Béguinage. Thus the Béguine, living generally
+in a house of her own, and free to reenter the world, occupies a
+different position from the nuns of the better-known Orders, though
+so long as she remains a member of her society she is bound by the
+vows of chastity and obedience to her ecclesiastical superiors.
+
+[Illustration: BRUGES. The Béguinage.]
+
+The Béguinage at Bruges, founded in the thirteenth century, is
+situated near the Minnewater, or Lac d'Amour, which every visitor
+is taken to see. This sheet of placid water, bordered by trees,
+which was a harbour in the busy times, is one of the prettiest
+bits of Bruges; and they say that if you go there at midnight,
+and stand upon the bridge which crosses it on the south, any wish
+which you may form will certainly come to pass. It is better to go
+alone, for strict silence is necessary to insure the working of
+this charm. A bridge over the water which runs from the Lac d'Amour
+leads through a gateway into the Béguinage, where a circle of small
+houses--whitewashed, with stepped gables, and green woodwork on the
+windows--surrounds a lawn planted with tall trees. There is a view
+of the spire of Notre Dame beyond the roofs, a favourite subject for
+the painters who come here in numbers on summer afternoons. The
+Church of Ste. Elizabeth, an unpretentious building, stands on one
+side of the lawn; and within it, many times a day, the Sisters may
+be seen on their knees repeating the Offices of the Church. When
+the service is finished they rise, remove their white head-coverings,
+and return demurely to their quaint little homes.
+
+Bruges has, needless to say, many churches, but nothing which can
+be compared to the magnificent Cathedral of Antwerp, to the imposing
+front of Ste. Gudule at Brussels, or to the huge mass which forms
+such a conspicuous landmark for several leagues round Malines.
+Still, some of the churches are not without interest: the Cathedral
+of St. Sauveur, where the stalls of the Knights of the Order of
+the Golden Fleece, which was founded at Bruges, are to be seen in
+the choir, and over one of them the arms of Edward IV. of England;
+the curious little Church of Jerusalem, with its 'Holy Sepulchre,'
+an exact copy of the traditionary grave in Palestine--a dark vault,
+entered by a passage so low that one must crawl through it, and
+where a light burns before a figure which lies there wrapped in
+a linen cloth; and the Church of Notre Dame, which contains some
+treasures, such as a lovely white marble statue of the Virgin and
+Child, from the chisel of Michael Angelo; the tombs of Charles
+the Bold of Burgundy and his daughter--the 'Gentle Mary,' whose
+untimely death at Bruges in 1482, after a short married life, saved
+her from witnessing the misfortunes which clouded the last years
+of her husband, the Archduke Maximilian; and a portion of the Holy
+Cross, which came to Bruges in the fifteenth century. The story
+goes that a rich merchant, a Dutchman from Dordrecht, Schoutteeten
+by name, who lived at Bruges, was travelling through Syria in the
+year 1380. One day, when journeying with a caravan, he saw a man
+hiding something in a wood, and, following him, discovered that
+it was a box, which he suspected might contain something valuable.
+Mijnheer Schoutteeten appropriated the box, and carried it home
+from Syria to Dordrecht, where a series of miracles began to occur
+of such a nature as to make it practically certain that the box
+(or some wood which it contained, for on this point the legend is
+vague) was a part of the true Cross! In course of time Schoutteeten
+died in the odour of sanctity, having on his death-bed expressed a
+wish that the wood which he had brought from the East should be
+given to the Church of Notre Dame at Bruges. His widow consoled
+herself by taking a second husband, who, Uutenhove by name, fulfilled
+the pious request of his predecessor, and thus another relic was
+added to the large collection which is preserved in the various
+churches and religious houses of Bruges. It was brought to Flanders
+in the year 1473, and must have been a source of considerable revenue
+to the Church since then.
+
+The buildings of Notre Dame, with the well-known Gruthuise Mansion
+which adjoins them, and the singularly graceful spire, higher than
+the Belfry tower, rising from the exquisite portico called 'Het
+Paradijs,' form a very beautiful group; but, with this exception,
+there is nothing remarkable about the churches of Bruges. One of
+them, however, has a peculiar interest--the Chapelle du Saint-Sang,
+which stands in the Place du Bourg in the corner next to the Hôtel
+de Ville. It is built in two stories. The lower, a dark, solemn
+chapel, like a crypt, was dedicated to St. Basil at an early period,
+and is one of the oldest buildings in Bruges. The greater part
+of the upper story does not date further back than the fifteenth
+century. But it is not the fabric itself, venerable though that is,
+but what it contains, that makes this place the Holy of Holies in
+the religious life of Bruges; for here, in a costly shrine of gold
+and silver adorned with precious stones, they guard the wonderful
+relic which was brought from Palestine in the time of the Crusaders
+by Thierry d'Alsace, Count of Flanders, and which is still worshipped
+by thousands of devout believers every year.
+
+Thierry d'Alsace, the old chroniclers tell us, visited the Holy
+Land four times, and was the leader of the Flemish warriors who,
+roused by the eloquence of St. Bernard of Clairvaux, joined the
+second Crusade in the summer of 1147. He had married Sybilla, sister
+of Baldwin, King of Jerusalem; and when the time came for his return
+to Europe, his brother-in-law and the Patriarch of Jerusalem resolved
+to reward his services by giving him a part of the most valuable relic
+which the Church in Palestine possessed, which was a small quantity
+of a red liquid, said to be blood and water, which, according to
+immemorial tradition, Joseph of Arimathæa had preserved after he
+had washed the dead body of Jesus.
+
+The earlier history of this relic is unknown, and is as obscure
+as that of the other 'Relics of the Holy Blood' which are to be
+found in various places. But there can be no doubt whatever that
+in the twelfth century the Christians at Jerusalem believed that
+it had been in existence since the day of the Crucifixion. It was,
+therefore, presented to Thierry with great solemnity in the Church
+of the Holy Sepulchre during the Christmas festivals of 1148. The
+Patriarch, having displayed the vessel which contained it to the
+people, divided the contents into two portions, one of which he
+poured into a small vial, the mouth of which was carefully sealed
+up and secured with gold wire. This vessel was next enclosed in
+a crystal tube, shut at the ends with golden stoppers, to which
+ax chain of silver was attached. Then the Patriarch gave the tube
+to Baldwin, from whose hands Thierry, kneeling on the steps of
+the altar, received it with profound emotion.[*]
+
+[Footnote *: Canon van Haecke, _Le Précieux Sang à Bruges_ (fourth
+edition), pp. 95, 96.]
+
+The Count, however, did not think his hands, which had shed so
+much human blood, worthy to convey the relic home; and he entrusted
+it to Leonius, chaplain of the Flemish Army, who hung it round
+his neck, and so carried it to Bruges, where he arrived in May,
+1150, along with Thierry, who, mounted on a white horse led by two
+barefooted monks, and holding the relic in his hand, was conducted
+in state to the Bourg, where he deposited the precious object in
+the Chapel of St. Basil, which is commonly known as the Chapel
+of the Holy Blood.
+
+After some time the relic was found to be dry, but, strange to say,
+it became liquid, we are told upon the authority of Pope Clement
+V., every Friday, 'usually at six o'clock.' This weekly miracle
+continued till about the year 1325. Since then it has never taken
+place except once, in 1388, when the vial containing the relic
+was being transferred to a new crystal tube; and on this occasion
+William, Bishop of Ancona, was astonished to see the relic turning
+redder than usual, and some drops, as of newly-shed blood, flowing
+within the vial, which he was holding in his hand. Many notable
+persons who were present, one of them the Bishop of Lincoln, testified
+to this event!
+
+Other miracles wrought through the agency of this relic are recorded.
+A child which had been born dead was taken to the shrine, and came
+to life after three days. A young girl who had suffered for twenty
+months from an issue of blood, and for whom the doctors could do
+nothing, was cured by the application of a piece of cloth which had
+been used to cover the relic. Another girl who had been paralyzed
+for a long time, being carried into the Chapel of St. Basil, was
+restored to complete strength the moment she kissed the crystal tube.
+In December, 1689, a fire broke out in the Bourg, and threatened to
+destroy the Hôtel de Ville; but a priest brought forth the tube
+containing the relic, and held it up before the flames, which were
+instantly extinguished. These and many other similar miracles,
+confirmed by the oath of witnesses and received by the Church at
+the present day as authentic, make the relic an object of profound
+devotion to the people of Bruges and the peasants of the surrounding
+country, who go in crowds to bow before it twice every Friday,
+when it is exhibited for public worship.
+
+It was nearly lost on several occasions in the days of almost constant
+war, and during the French Revolution it was concealed for some
+years in the house of a private citizen. The Chapel of St. Basil
+suffered from the disturbed condition of the country, and when
+Napoleon came to Bruges in 1810 it was such a complete wreck that
+the magistrates were on the point of sweeping it away altogether.
+But Napoleon saved it, declaring that when he looked on the ruins
+he fancied himself once more amongst the antiquities of Egypt,
+and that to destroy them would be a crime. Four years after the
+Battle of Waterloo the relic was brought out from its hiding-place,
+and in 1856 the chapel was restored from the designs of two English
+architects, William Brangwyn and Thomas Harper King.[*]
+
+[Footnote *: Gilliat-Smith, _The Story of Bruges_, p. 103.]
+
+On the first Monday after the 2nd of May every year the town of
+Bruges is full of strangers, who have come to witness the celebrated
+'Procession of the Holy Blood,' which there is good reason to believe
+has taken place annually (except during the French Revolution) for
+the last 755 years.
+
+Very early in the day a Mass is celebrated in the Upper Chapel
+of the Holy Blood, which is crowded to the doors. In the crypt,
+or lower chapel, where many people are kneeling before the sacred
+images, the gloom, the silence, the bent figures dimly seen in the
+faint yellow light of a few tapers, make up a weird scene all the
+morning till about nine o'clock, when the relic, in its 'châsse,'
+or tabernacle, is carried to the Cathedral of St. Sauveur, and
+placed on the high altar, while a pontifical Mass is celebrated
+by one of the Bishops. When that is done, the procession starts
+on its march along the chief thoroughfares of the town. The houses
+are decorated with flags, and candles burn in almost every window.
+Through the narrow streets, between crowds of people standing on
+the pavements or looking down from the windows, while the church
+bells ring and wreaths of incense fill the air, bands of music,
+squadrons of cavalry, crucifixes, shrines, images, the banners
+of the parishes and the guilds, heralds in their varied dresses,
+bareheaded pilgrims from England, France, and other countries,
+pages, maidens in white, bearing palms, or crowns of thorn, or
+garlands, priests with relics, acolytes and chanting choristers,
+pass slowly along. The buffoonery of the Middle Ages, when giants,
+ballet-dancers, and mythological characters figured in the scene,
+has been abandoned; but Abraham and Isaac, King David and King
+Solomon, Joseph and the Virgin Mary, the Magi, and many saints
+and martyrs, walk in the long procession, which is closed by the
+Bishops and clergy accompanying the gorgeous shrine containing
+the small tube of something red like blood, before which all the
+people sink to the ground, and remain kneeling till it has passed.
+
+The proceedings of the day end with a benediction at an altar erected
+in front of the Hôtel de Ville. The Bourg is filled from side to side
+with those who have taken part in the procession, and by thousands
+of spectators who have followed them from all parts of the town to
+witness the closing scene. The crowd gathers under the trees and
+along the sides of the square, the centre of which, occupied by
+the processionists, is a mass of colour, above which the standards
+and images which have been carried through the streets rise against
+the dark background of the Hôtel de Ville and the Chapel of the
+Holy Blood. The relic is taken out of the châsse, and a priest,
+standing on the steps of the altar high above the crowd, holds it
+up to be worshipped. Everyone bows low, and then, in dead silence,
+the mysterious object is carried into the chapel, and with this
+the chief religious ceremony of the year at Bruges is brought to
+a close.
+
+There are sights in Bruges that night, within a stone's-throw of
+the Chapel of the Holy Blood, which are worth seeing, they contrast
+so strangely with all this fervour of religion.
+
+The curtain has fallen upon the drama of the day. The flags are
+furled and put aside. The vestments are in the sacristy. Shrines,
+canopies, censers, all the objects carried in the procession, have
+disappeared into the churches. The church doors are locked, and the
+images are left to stand all night without so much as one solitary
+worshipper kneeling before them. The Bourg is empty and dark, steeped
+in black shadows at the door of the chapel where the relic has
+been laid to rest. It is all quiet there, but a stroll through
+the Rue de l'Âne Aveugle and across the canal by the bridge which
+leads to the purlieus of the fish-markets brings one upon another
+scene. Every second house, if not every house, is a café, 'herberg,'
+or 'estaminet,' with a bar and sanded floor and some rough chairs and
+tables; and on the night of the Procession of the Holy Blood they are
+crowded to the doors. Peasants from the country are there in great
+force. For some days before and after the sacred festival the
+villagers are in the habit of coming into Bruges--whole families of
+them, father and mother, sons and daughters, all in their best finery.
+They walk through the streets, following the route by which the
+Holy Blood is carried, telling their beads and saying their prayers,
+crossing themselves, and kneeling at any image of Christ, or Madonna,
+or saint, which they may notice at the street corners. It is curious
+to watch their sunburnt faces and uncouth ways as they slouch along,
+their hands busy with their beads, and their lips never ceasing
+for a moment to mutter prayer after prayer. They follow in the
+wake of the Procession of the Holy Blood, or wait to fall upon
+their knees when it passes and receive the blessing of the Bishop,
+who walks with fingers raised, scattering benedictions from side
+to side. In the evening, before starting for home, they go to the
+cafés.
+
+As evening passes into night the sounds of music and dancing are
+heard. At the doors people sit drinking round tables placed on the
+pavement or in the rank, poisonous gutter. The hot air is heavy
+with the smell of decayed fish. Inside the cafés men and women,
+old and young, are dancing in the fetid atmosphere to jingling
+pianos or accordions. The heat, the close, sour fumes of musty
+clothing, tobacco, beer, gin, fried fish, and unwashed humanity,
+are overpowering. There are disgusting sights in all directions.
+Fat women, with red, perspiring faces and dirty fingers, still
+clutching their rosaries; tawdry girls, field-workers, with flushed
+faces, dancing with country lads, most of whom are more than half
+tipsy; ribald jokes and laughter and leering eyes; reeling, drunken
+men; maudlin affection in one corner, and jealous disputing in
+another; crying babies; beer and gin spilt on the tables; and all
+sorts of indecency and hideous details which Swift might have gloated
+over or Hogarth painted.
+
+This is how the day of the Holy Blood procession is finished by
+many of the countryfolk. The brutal cabaret comes after the prayers
+and adoration of the morning! It is a world of contrasts. But soon
+the lights are out, the shutters are put up, the last customer goes
+staggering homewards, and the Belfry speaks again, as it spoke
+when the sweet singer lay dreaming at the Fleur-de-Blé:
+
+ 'In the ancient town of Bruges,
+ In the quaint old Flemish city,
+ As the evening shades descended,
+ Low and loud and sweetly blended,
+ Low at times and loud at times,
+ And changing like a poet's rhymes,
+ Rang the beautiful wild chimes
+ From the Belfry in the market
+ Of the ancient town of Bruges.
+ Then, with deep sonorous clangour,
+ Calmly answering their sweet anger,
+ When the wrangling bells had ended,
+ Slowly struck the clock eleven,
+ And, from out the silent heaven,
+ Silence on the town descended.
+ Silence, silence everywhere,
+ On the earth and in the air,
+ Save that footsteps here and there
+ Of some burgher home returning,
+ By the street lamps faintly burning,
+ For a moment woke the echoes
+ Of the ancient town of Bruges.'
+
+[Illustration: BRUGES. Quai des Marbriers.]
+
+
+
+
+THE BRUGES MATINS--BATTLE OF THE GOLDEN SPURS
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IV
+
+THE BRUGES MATINS--BATTLE OF THE GOLDEN SPURS
+
+The visitor to Bruges is reminded, wherever he goes, of the stirring
+events which fill the chronicles of the town for several centuries.
+Opposite the Belfry, in the middle of the Market-Place, is the
+monument to Peter De Coninck and John Breidel, on which garlands
+of flowers are laid every summer, in memory of what they did when
+the burghers rose against the French in May, 1302; and amongst
+the modern frescoes which cover the walls of the Grande Salle des
+Échevins in the Hôtel de Ville, with its roof of fourteenth-century
+woodwork, is one which represents the return from the Battle of
+the Golden Spurs, that famous fight in which the hardy peasantry
+of Flanders overthrew the knights of France whom Philip the Fair
+had sent to avenge the blood of the Frenchmen who had died on the
+terrible morning of the 'Bruges Matins.'
+
+The fourteenth century had opened. The town had now reached the
+limits which have contained it ever since--an irregular oval with a
+circumference of between four and five miles, surrounded by double
+ditches, and a strong wall pierced by nine fortified gateways;
+and as the town had grown, the privileges and liberties of the
+townsmen had grown likewise. Sturdy, independent, and resolved
+to keep the management of their own affairs in their own hands,
+the burghers of Bruges, like those of the other Flemish towns, had
+succeeded in establishing a system of self-government so complete
+that it roused the opposition of Guy de Dampierre, Count of Flanders,
+whose efforts to diminish the power of these communities at length
+brought about a crisis which gave Philip the Fair of France an
+excuse for interfering. The Count, having to contend both against
+his own subjects and against the ambitions of the King of France,
+fell from power, and in the end Flanders was annexed to France.
+
+Soon after this rich province had been added to his domains, Philip
+came with his wife, Joanna of Navarre, on a visit to Bruges. Already
+there were two factions in the town--the Leliarts, or French party,
+consisting chiefly of the upper classes, and the Clauwerts, or
+Flemish party, to which the mass of the people belonged. By the
+former Philip was received in royal fashion, and so magnificent
+were the dresses and jewels worn by the wives and daughters of the
+nobles and rich burgesses, who sat in the windows and balconies
+as the royal procession passed along, that the Queen was moved
+to jealousy. 'I thought,' she said, 'that I alone was Queen; but
+here in this place I have six hundred rivals.' But in the streets
+below there were sullen looks and murmurs of discontent, which
+grew louder and louder every day, when, after the departure of the
+Court, the magistrates, who belonged to the French party, proposed
+that the merchant guilds should find money to defray some of the
+expenses which had been incurred on this occasion.
+
+At this time Peter De Coninck was Dean of the Guild of Weavers,
+a man of substance, popular and eloquent. There was a tumultuous
+gathering in the Market-Place, when, standing in front of the Belfry,
+with the leaders of five-and-twenty guilds around him, he declaimed on
+liberty, and attacked the magistrates, calling on his fellow-townsmen
+to resist the taxes. The city officers, on the order of the magistrates,
+arrested De Coninck and his chief supporters, and hurried them to the
+prison in the Bourg. But in a few hours the mob forced an entrance
+and released them. The signal for revolt had been given, and for
+some months Bruges, like the rest of Flanders, was in disorder. De
+Coninck, who had been joined by John Breidel, Dean of the Guild of
+Butchers, was busy rousing the people in all parts of the country.
+He visited Ghent, amongst other places, and tried to persuade the
+magistrates that if Ghent and Bruges united their forces the whole
+Flemish people would rise, crush the Leliarts, and expel the French.
+But the men of Ghent would not listen to him, and he returned to
+Bruges. Here, too, he met with a rebuff, for the magistrates, having
+heard that Jacques de Châtillon, whom Philip had made Governor of
+Flanders, was marching on the town, would not allow him to remain
+amongst them. He went to Damme, and with him went, not only Breidel,
+but 5,000 burghers of the national party, stout Clauwerts, who had
+devoted themselves to regaining the liberty of their country.
+
+[Illustration: A FLEMISH YOUNG WOMAN]
+
+When Châtillon rode up to the walls of Bruges and demanded entrance
+the magistrates agreed to open the gates, on condition that he
+brought with him only 300 men-at-arms. But he broke his word, and
+the town was entered by 2,000 knights, whose haughty looks and
+threatening language convinced the people that treachery was intended.
+It was whispered in the Market-Place that the waggons which rumbled
+over the drawbridges carried ropes with which the Clauwerts who
+had remained in the town were to be hanged; that there was to be
+a general massacre, in which not even the women and children would
+be spared; and that the Frenchmen never unbuckled their swords
+or took off their armour, but were ready to begin the slaughter
+at any moment. It was a day of terror in Bruges, and when evening
+came some of the burghers slipped out, made their way to Damme,
+and told De Coninck what was passing in the town.
+
+That night Châtillon gave a feast to his chief officers, and amongst
+his guests was Pierre Flotte, Chancellor of France, perhaps the
+ablest of those jurists by whose evil councils Philip the Fair
+was encouraged in the ideas of autocracy which led him to make
+the setting up of a despotism the policy of his whole life. With
+Flotte--'that Belial,' as Pope Boniface VIII. once called him--and
+the rest, Châtillon sat revelling till a late hour. The night wore
+on; De Châtillon's party broke up, and went to rest; the weary
+sentinels were half asleep at their posts; and soon all Bruges
+was buried in silence. Here and there lights twinkled in some of
+the guild-houses, where a few of the burghers sat anxiously waiting
+for what the morrow might bring forth, while others went to the
+ramparts on the north, and strained their eyes to see if help was
+coming from Damme.
+
+At early dawn--it was Friday, May 18, 1302--the watchers on the
+ramparts saw a host of armed men rapidly approaching the town. They
+were divided into two parties, one of which, led by De Coninck,
+made for the Porte Ste. Croix, while the other, under Breidel,
+marched to the Porte de Damme, a gateway which no longer exists,
+but which was then one of the most important entrances, being that
+by which travellers came from Damme and Sluis. Messengers from
+the ramparts ran swiftly through the streets, in which daylight
+was now beginning to appear, and spread the news from house to
+house. Silently the burghers took their swords and pikes, left
+their homes, and gathered in the Market-Place and near the houses
+in which the French were sleeping. The French slept on till, all
+of a sudden, they were wakened by the tramp of feet, the clash
+of arms, and shouts of 'Flanders for the Lion!' Breidel had led
+his men into the town, and they were rushing through the streets
+to where Châtillon had taken up his quarters, while De Coninck,
+having passed through the Porte Ste. Croix, was marching to the
+Bourg. The Frenchmen, bewildered, surprised, and only half awake,
+ran out into the streets. The Flemings were shouting 'Schilt ende
+Vriendt! Schilt ende Vriendt!'[*] and every man who could not pronounce
+these words was known to be a Frenchman, and slain upon the spot.
+Some fled to the gates; but at every gate they found a band of
+guards, who called out 'Schilt ende Vriendt!' and put them to the
+sword.
+
+[Footnote *: 'Shield and Friend!']
+
+All that summer's morning, and on throughout the day, the massacre
+continued. Old men, women, and children hurled stones from the
+roofs and windows down upon the enemy. Breidel, a man of great
+strength, killed many with his own hand, and those whom he wounded
+were beaten to death where they fell by the apprentices with their
+iron clubs. In the Market-Place, close to where the monument to De
+Coninck and Breidel stands, a party of soldiers, under a gallant
+French knight, Gauthier de Sapignies, made a stand; but they were
+overpowered and slaughtered to the last man. Châtillon tried to
+rally his forces, but the surprise had been too complete, and,
+disguising himself in the cassock of a priest, he hid, in company
+with Chancellor Flotte, till it was dark, when they managed to
+escape from the town. By this time the carnage had ceased; the
+walls of the houses and the gutters ran with blood; and the burghers
+of Bruges had done their work so thoroughly that 2,000 Frenchmen
+lay dead upon the streets.
+
+But the final reckoning with France was yet to come. Then Châtillon
+reached Paris and told his master the direful story of the Bruges
+Matins, Philip swore revenge; and a few weeks later an army 40,000
+strong invaded Flanders, under the Comte d'Artois, with whom rode
+also Châtillon, Flotte, and many nobles of France. The Flemings went
+to meet them--not only the burghers of Bruges, led by De Coninck
+and Breidel, marching under the banners of their guilds, but men
+from every part of Flanders--and on July 11, near Courtrai, the
+Battle of the Golden Spurs was fought.
+
+[Illustration: A FLEMISH BURGHER]
+
+The ground was marshy, with a stream and pools of water between
+the two armies; and just as the Scots at Bannockburn, twelve years
+afterwards, prepared pitfalls for the heavy cavalry of England, so
+the Flemings laid a trap for the French knights by cutting down
+brushwood and covering the water. The horsemen, clad in cumbrous
+armour, charged, the brushwood gave way, and most of them sank
+into the water. The Comte d'Artois got clear, but was beaten to
+the ground and killed. The Chancellor Flotte, who had boasted that
+he would bring the people of Bruges to their knees, was trampled to
+death. Châtillon died too; and when, at last, a long day's fighting
+came to an end, the Flemings had gained a complete victory. By this
+battle, which took its name from the thousands of golden spurs
+which were torn from the French knights who fell, the victors
+secured--for a time, at least--the liberty of their country, and
+the memory of it was for many a day to Flanders what the memory
+of Bannockburn was to Scotland, or of Morgarten to Switzerland.
+
+
+
+
+DAMME--THE SEA-FIGHT AT SLUIS--SPLENDOUR OF BRUGES IN THE MIDDLE
+AGES--THE FALL AND LOSS OF TRADE
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER V
+
+DAMME--THE SEA-FIGHT AT SLUIS--SPLENDOUR OF BRUGES IN THE MIDDLE
+AGES--THE FALL AND LOSS OF TRADE
+
+Damme, where the patriots mustered on the eve of the Bruges Matins,
+is within a short hour's stroll from the east end of the town.
+The Roya, which disappears from view, as we have already seen,
+opposite the Quai du Rosaire, emerges from its hidden course at
+the west end of the Quai du Miroir, where the statue of Jan van
+Eyck stands near the door of the building now used as a public
+library. This building was once the Customs House of Bruges,
+conveniently situated in the neighbourhood of the Market-Place, and
+on the side of the Roya, which thence stretches eastwards between
+the Quai du Miroir and the Quai Spinola for a few hundred yards,
+and then turns sharply to the north, and continues between the
+Quai Long and the Quai de la Potterie, which are built in rambling
+fashion on either side of the water. Some of the houses are old,
+others of no earlier date, apparently, than the seventeenth or
+eighteenth centuries; some large and well preserved, and some mere
+cottages, half ruinous, with low gables and faded yellow fronts,
+huddled together on the rough causeway, alongside of which are
+moored canal-boats with brown hulls and deck-houses gay with white
+and green paint. At the end of the Quai de la Potterie is the modern
+Bassin de Commerce, in which the Roya loses itself, the harbour for
+the barges and small steamers which come by the canal connecting
+Ostend with Bruges and Ghent; and near this was, in ancient days,
+the Porte de Damme, through which Breidel and his followers burst
+on that fateful morning in May 600 years ago.
+
+To the right of the Bassin a broad canal, constructed by Napoleon
+in 1810, extends in a straight line eastwards, contained within
+dykes which raise it above a wide expanse of level meadow-lands
+intersected by ditches, and dotted here and there by the white-walled
+cottages with red roofs and green outside shutters which are so
+typical of Flemish scenery. About two miles out of Bruges one comes
+in sight of a windmill perched on a slope at the side of the canal,
+a square church-tower, a few houses, and some grassy mounds, which
+were once strong fortifications. Even the historical imagination,
+which everyone who walks round Bruges must carry with him, is hardly
+equal to realizing that this was once a bustling seaport, with a
+harbour in which more than a hundred merchant ships, laden with
+produce from all parts of the world, were sometimes lying at the
+same time. In those busy times Damme, they say, contained 50,000
+inhabitants; now there are only about 1,100.
+
+Beyond Damme the canal winds on through the same flat landscape,
+low-lying, water-logged, with small farmhouses and scanty trees, and
+in the distance, on the few patches of higher ground, the churches
+of Oostkerke and Westcapelle. At last, soon after passing the Dutch
+frontier, the canal ends in a little dock with gray, lichen-covered
+sides; and this is Sluis, a dull place, with a few narrow streets, a
+market-place, two churches, and a belfry of the fourteenth century.
+It is quite inland now, miles from the salt water; and from the
+high ramparts which still surround it the view extends to the north
+across broad green fields, covering what was once the bed of the
+sea, in the days when the tide ebbed and flowed in the channel of
+the Zwijn, over which ships passed sailing on their way to Bruges.
+But any English traveller who, having gone a little way out of the
+beaten track of summer tourists, may chance to mount the ramparts,
+and look down upon the fields which stretch away to the shores of
+the North Sea and the estuary of the Scheldt, and inland beyond
+Damme to the Belfry and the spires of Bruges, is gazing on the
+scene of a great event in the naval history of England.
+
+Here, on what is now dry land, on the morning of June 24, 1340,
+800 ships of war, full of armed men--35,000 of them--were drawn up
+in line of battle; and further out to sea, beyond the entrance of
+the Zwijn, the newly-risen sun was shining on the sails of another
+fleet which was manœuvring in the offing.
+
+[Illustration: BRUGES. Qua du Miroir]
+
+'In the cities of Flanders,' says Dr. Gardiner, 'had arisen
+manufacturing populations which supplied the countries round with
+the products of the loom. To the Ghent and Bruges of the Middle
+Ages England stood in the same relation as that which the Australian
+colonies hold to the Leeds and Bradford of our own day. The sheep
+which grazed over the wide, unenclosed pasture-lands of our island
+formed a great part of the wealth of England, and that wealth depended
+entirely on the flourishing trade with the Flemish towns in which
+English wool was converted into cloth.' When, therefore, Edward
+III. claimed the throne of France, and the Hundred Years' War began,
+it was of vital importance to the trade of Flanders and England
+that the merchants of the two countries should maintain friendly
+relations with each other. But Philip of Valois had persuaded the
+Count of Flanders, Louis de Nevers, to order the arrest of all
+the English in Flanders, and Edward had retaliated by arresting
+all the Flemings who were in England, and forbidding the export of
+English wool to Flanders. The result was that the weavers of Bruges
+and the other manufacturing towns of Flanders found themselves on
+the road to ruin; and, having no interest in the question at issue
+between the Kings of France and England, apart from its effect
+on their commercial prosperity, the burghers of Bruges, Ghent,
+and Ypres, under the leadership of the famous Jacob van Artevelde
+(anticipating, as one of the modern historians of Bruges has noticed,
+what the Great Powers did for Belgium in 1830[*]), succeeded in
+securing, with the assent of Philip, the neutrality of Flanders.
+The French King, however, did not keep faith with the Flemings,
+but proceeded to acts of aggression against them, and a league
+against France was formed between England and Flanders.
+
+[Footnote *: Robinson, _Bruges, an Historical Sketch_, p. 107.]
+
+In June, 1340, Edward, who was then in England, hearing that an
+immense number of French ships of war were at anchor in the Zwijn,
+set sail to give them battle with a squadron of 300 vessels. The
+English fleet anchored off the coast between Blankenberghe and
+Heyst on the evening of June 23, and from the top of the dunes the
+English scouts saw in the distance the masts of the French ships
+in the Zwijn.
+
+As soon as there was light next morning, the English weighed anchor
+and sailed along the coast to the east; past lonely yellow sands,
+which have swarmed during recent years with workmen toiling at the
+construction of the immense harbour of See-Brugge, which is to
+be the future port of Bruges; past what was then the small fishing
+hamlet of Heyst; past a range of barren dunes, amongst which to-day
+Duinbergen, the latest of the Flemish watering-places, with its
+spacious hotel and trim villas, is being laid out; past a waste of
+storm-swept sand and rushes, on which are now the digue of Knocke,
+a cluster of hotels and crowded lodging-houses, and a golf-course;
+and so onwards till they opened the mouth of the Zwijn, and saw
+the French ships crowding the entrance, 'their masts appearing to
+be like a great wood,' and beyond them the walls of Sluis rising
+from the wet sands left by the receding tide.
+
+It was low-water, and while waiting for the turn of the tide the
+English fleet stood out to sea for some time, so that Nicholas
+Béhuchet, the French Admiral, began to flatter himself that King
+Edward, finding himself so completely outnumbered, would not dare
+to risk fighting against such odds. The odds, indeed, were nearly
+three to one against the English seamen; but as soon as the tide
+began to flow they steered straight into the channel, and, Edward
+leading the van, came to close quarters, ship to ship. The famous
+archers of England, who six years later were to do such execution
+at Crecy, lined the bulwarks, and poured in a tempest of arrows so
+thick that men fell from the tops of the French ships like leaves
+before a storm. The first of the four lines in which Béhuchet had
+drawn up his fleet was speedily broken, and the English, brandishing
+their swords and pikes, boarded the French ships, drove their crews
+overboard, and hoisted the flag of England. King Edward was wounded,
+and the issue may have been doubtful, when suddenly more ships,
+coming from the North of England, appeared in sight, and hordes
+of Flemings from all parts of Flanders, from the coast, and even
+from inland towns so far away as Ypres,[*] came swarming in boats
+to join in the attack. This decided the fate of the great battle,
+which continued till sunset. When it ended, the French fleet had
+ceased to exist, with the exception of a few ships which escaped
+when it was dark. The Flemings captured Béhuchet, and hung him
+then and there. Nearly 30,000 of his men perished, many of whom
+were drowned while attempting to swim ashore, or were clubbed to
+death by the Flemings who lined the beach, waiting to take vengeance
+on the invaders for having burned their homesteads and carried
+off their flocks. The English lost two ships and 4,000 men; but
+the victory was so complete that no courtier was bold enough to
+carry the news to King Philip, who did not know what had befallen
+his great fleet till the Court jester went to him, and said, 'Oh!
+the English cowards! the English cowards! They had not the courage
+to jump into the sea as our noble Frenchmen did at Sluis.'
+
+[Footnote *: Vereecke, _Histoire Militaire de la Ville d'Ypres_,
+p. 36.]
+
+It is strange to think that Flemish peasants work, and cattle feed,
+and holiday visitors from Knocke, or Sluis, or Kadzand ramble about
+dry-shod where the waves were rolling in on that midsummer's morning,
+and that far beneath the grass the timbers of so many stout ships
+and the bones of so many valiant seamen have long since mouldered
+away. And it is also strange to think, when wandering along the
+canals of Bruges, where now the swans glide silently about in the
+almost stagnant water which laps the basements of the old houses,
+how in the fourteenth and fifteenth centuries ships of every nation
+carried in great bales of merchandise, and that rich traders stored
+them in warehouses and strong vaults, which are now mere coal-cellars,
+or the dark and empty haunts of the rats which swarm in the canals.
+
+'There is,' says Mr. Robinson, 'in the National Library at Paris a
+list of the kingdoms and cities which sent their produce to Bruges
+at that time. England sent wool, lead, tin, coal, and cheese; Ireland
+and Scotland, chiefly hides and wool; Denmark, pigs; Russia, Hungary,
+and Bohemia, large quantities of wax; Poland, gold and silver;
+Germany, wine; Liége, copper kettles; and Bulgaria, furs.' After
+naming many parts of Europe, Asia, and Africa, that sent goods,
+the manuscript adds: 'And all the aforesaid realms and regions
+send their merchants with wares to Flanders, besides those who
+come from France, Poitou, and Gascony, and from the three islands
+of which we know not the names of their kingdoms.' The trade of
+Bruges was enormous. People flocked there from all quarters.
+
+ 'Lombard and Venetian merchants with deep-laden argosies;
+ Ministers from twenty nations; more than royal pomp and ease.'
+
+We read of 150 ships entering in one day, and of German merchants
+buying 2,600 pieces of cloth, made by Flemish weavers, in a morning's
+marketing. A citizen of Bruges was always at the head of the Hanseatic
+League, and maintained the rights of that vast commercial society
+under the title of 'Comte de la Hanse.' Merchant princes, members
+of the Hanse, lived here in palaces. Money-changers grew rich.
+Edward III. borrowed from the Bardi at Bruges on the security of
+the Crown jewels of England. Contracts of insurance against maritime
+risks were entered into from an early period, and the merchant
+shipping code which regulated traffic by sea was known as the 'Röles
+de Damme.'[*] There were twenty consulates at one time in Bruges,
+and the population of the town is said, though it is difficult to
+believe that this is not an exaggeration, to have been more than
+200,000 before the middle of the fourteenth century.
+
+[Footnote *: Gilliodts van Severen, _Bruges Ancienne et Moderne_,
+p. 14.]
+
+Six years after the Battle of Sluis, Louis of Nevers was killed at
+Crecy, and his son, Louis of Maele, reigned in his stead as Count
+of Flanders. He was a Leliart to the core, and his reign of nearly
+forty years, one long struggle against the liberties of his people,
+witnessed the capture of Bruges by Philip van Artevelde, the invasion
+of Flanders by the French, the defeat of the Nationalists, and the
+death of Van Artevelde on the field of Roosebeke. Nevertheless,
+during this period and after it Bruges grew in beauty and in wealth.
+The Hôtel de Ville, without the grandeur of the Hôtel de Ville at
+Brussels, but still a gem of mediæval architecture, was built on
+the site of the old 'Ghiselhuis' of Baldwin Bras-de-Fer. Other noble
+buildings, rich in design and beautiful in all their outlines, and
+great mansions, with marble halls and ceilings of exquisitely carved
+woodwork, rose on every side; towers and pinnacles, shapely windows
+and graceful arches, overhung the waterways; luxury increased; in
+the homes of the nobles and wealthy merchants were stores of precious
+stones, tapestries, silk, fine linen, cloth of gold; the churches
+and many buildings gleamed with gilded stone and tinted glass and
+brilliant frescoes. Art flourished as the town grew richer. The
+elder and the younger Van Eyck, Gerard David, and Memlinc, with
+many others before and after them, were attracted by its splendour,
+as modern painters have been attracted by its decay; and though the
+'Adoration of the Immaculate Lamb' hangs in the choir of St. Bavon
+at Ghent, the genius which coloured that matchless altar-piece
+found its inspiration within the walls of Bruges.
+
+The history of Bruges for many long years, especially under the
+rule of the House of Burgundy, was, in the midst of war, turmoil,
+and rebellion, the history of continuous progress. But all this
+prosperity depended on the sea. So long as the Zwijn remained open,
+neither war nor faction, not even the last great rising against
+the Archduke Maximilian, which drove away the foreign merchants,
+most of whom went to Antwerp, and so impoverished the town that
+no less than 5,000 houses were standing empty in the year 1405,[*]
+could have entirely ruined Bruges. These disasters might have been
+retrieved if the channel of communication with Damme and Sluis had
+not been lost; but for a long time the condition of this important
+waterway had been the cause of grave anxiety to the people of Bruges.
+The heavy volume of water which poured with every ebbing tide down
+the Scheldt between Flushing and Breskens swept past the island of
+Walcheren, and spread out into the North Sea and down the English
+Channel, leaving the mud it carried with it on the sands round the
+mouth of the Zwijn, which itself did not discharge a current strong
+enough to prevent the slow but sure formation of a bank across its
+entrance. Charters, moreover, had been granted to various persons,
+under which they drained the adjoining lands, and gradually reclaimed
+large portions from the sea. The channel, at no time very deep,
+became shallower, narrower, and more difficult of access, until at
+last, during the second half of the fifteenth century, the passage
+between Sluis and Damme was navigable only by small ships. Soon
+the harbour at Damme was nearly choked up with sand. Many schemes
+were tried in the hope of preserving the Zwijn, but the sea-trade
+of Bruges dwindled away to a mere nothing, and finally disappeared
+before the middle of the sixteenth century.
+
+[Footnote *: Gilliodts van Severen, p. 25.]
+
+And so Bruges fell from greatness. There are still some traces of
+the ancient bed of the Zwijn amongst the fields near Coolkerke,
+a village a short distance to the north of Bruges--a broad ditch
+with broken banks, and large pools of slimy water lying desolate
+and forlorn in a wilderness of tangled bushes. These are now the
+only remains of the highway by which the 'deep-laden argosies'
+used to enter in the days of old.
+
+
+
+
+'BRUGES LA MORTE'
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VI
+
+'BRUGES LA MORTE'
+
+They call it 'Bruges la Morte,' and at every turn there is something
+to remind us of the deadly blight which fell upon the city when
+its trade was lost. The faded colours, the timeworn brickwork, the
+indescribable look of decay which, even on the brightest morning,
+throws a shade of melancholy over the whole place, lead one to
+think of some aged dame, who has 'come down in the world,' wearing
+out the finery of better days. It is all very sad and pathetic,
+but strangely beautiful, and the painter never lived who could
+put on canvas the mellow tints with which Time has clothed these
+old walls, and thus veiled with tender hand the havoc it has made.
+To stand on the bridge which crosses the canal at the corner of
+the Quai des Marbriers and the Quai Vert, where the pinnacles of
+the Palais du Franc and the roof of the Hôtel de Ville, with the
+Belfry just showing above them, and dull red walls rising from
+the water, make up a unique picture of still-life, is to read a
+sermon in stones, an impressive lesson in history.
+
+The loss of trade brought Bruges face to face with the 'question
+of the unemployed' in a very aggravated form. How to provide for
+the poor became a most serious problem, and so many of the people
+were reduced to living on charity that almshouses sprang up all
+over the town. God's Houses ('Godshuisen') they called them, and
+call them still. They are to be found in all directions--quaint
+little places, planted down here and there, each with a small chapel
+of its own, with moss-grown roofs and dingy walls, and doors that
+open on to the uneven cobbles. Every stone of them spells pauperism.
+The Church does much towards maintaining these shelters for the
+poor--perhaps too much, if it is true that there are 10,000 paupers
+in Bruges out of a population of about 55,000. There is a great deal
+of begging in the streets, and a sad lack of sturdy self-respect
+amongst the lower class, which many think is caused by the system
+of doles, for which the Church is chiefly responsible. Bruges might
+not have been so picturesque to-day if her commerce had survived;
+but the beauty of a town is dearly purchased at the cost of such
+degradation and loss of personal independence.
+
+[Illustration: BRUGES. View of the Palais du Franc.]
+
+It was not only the working class which suffered. Many rich families
+sank into poverty, and their homes, some of which were more like
+palaces than private houses, had to be dismantled. The fate of
+one of these lordly mansions is connected with an episode which
+carries us back into the social life of Bruges in the middle of
+the seventeenth century. On the right side of the Rue Haute, as
+one goes from the Place du Bourg, there is a high block containing
+two large houses, Nos. 6 and 8, of that street. It is now a big,
+plain building without a trace of architectural distinction; but
+in the seventeenth century it was a single mansion, built about
+the year 1320, and was one of the many houses with towers which
+gave the Bruges of that time almost the appearance of an Oriental
+city. It was called the House of the Seven Towers, from the seven
+pinnacles which surmounted it; and at the back there was a large
+garden, which extended to the canal and Quai des Marbriers.
+
+In April, 1656, the 'tall man above two yards high, with dark brown
+hair, scarcely to be distinguished from black,' for whom the Roundheads
+had searched all England after the Battle of Worcester, found his
+way to Bruges, with his brother Henry, Duke of Gloucester, and
+the train of Royalists who formed their Court. For nearly three
+years after Worcester, Charles II. had lived in France; but in
+July, 1654, the alliance between Cromwell and Mazarin drove him to
+Germany, where he remained till Don John of Austria became Governor
+of the Spanish Netherlands. Thereupon the prospect of recovering
+the English throne by the assistance of Spain led him to remove
+his Court, which had been established for some time at Cologne,
+to Flanders. He arrived at Bruges on April 22, 1656. His brother
+James, Duke of York, and afterwards King of England, held a commission
+in the French army, and Mazarin offered him a command in Italy.
+Charles, however, requested him to leave the French army, and enter
+the service of Spain. At first James refused; but by the mediation
+of their sister, the Princess of Orange, he was persuaded to do
+as his brother wished, and join the Court at Bruges. The Irish
+Viscount Tarah received Charles, when he first arrived, in his
+house in the Rue du Vieux Bourg, and there gave him, we read in
+local history, 'une brillante hospitalité.' But in the beginning
+of June the Court took up its quarters in the House of the Seven
+Towers.
+
+During his sojourn in Flanders, Charles was carefully watched by
+the secret service officers of the Commonwealth Government, who
+sent home reports of all he did. These reports, many of which are
+in the Thurloe State Papers and other collections, contain some
+curious details about the exiled Court.
+
+There never was a more interesting 'English colony' at Bruges than
+at that time. Hyde, who received the Great Seal at Bruges, was there
+with Ormonde and the Earls of Bristol, Norwich, and Rochester.
+Sir Edward Nicholas was Secretary of State; and we read of Colonel
+Sydenham, Sir Robert Murray, and 'Mr. Cairless', who sat on the
+tree with Charles Stewart after Worcester fight. Another of the
+exiles at Bruges was Sir James Turner, the soldier of fortune,
+who served under Gustavus Adolphus, persecuted the Covenanters
+in Scotland, and is usually supposed to have been the original
+of Dugald Dalgetty in Sir Walter Scott's _Legend of Montrose_.
+A list of the royal household is still preserved at Bruges. It
+was prepared in order that the town council might fix the daily
+allowance of wine and beer which was to be given to the Court,
+and contains the names of about sixty persons, with a note of the
+supply granted to each family.
+
+A 'Letter of Intelligence' (the report of a spy), dated from Bruges
+on September 29, 1656, mentions that Lilly, the astrologer of London,
+had written to say that the King would be restored to the throne
+next year, and that all the English at Bruges were delighted. But
+in the meantime they were very hard up for ready money. Ever since
+leaving England Charles and his followers had suffered from the
+most direful impecuniosity. We find Hyde declaring that he has
+'neither shoes nor shirt.' The King himself was constantly running
+into debt for his meals, and his friends spent many a hungry day
+at Bruges. If by good luck they chanced to be in funds, one meal a
+day sufficed for a party of half a dozen courtiers. If it was cold
+they could not afford to purchase firewood. The Earl of Norwich
+writes, saying that he has to move about so as to get lodgings on
+credit, and avoid people to whom he owes money. Colonel Borthwick,
+who claims to have served the King most faithfully, complains that he
+is in prison at Bruges on suspicion of disloyalty, has not changed
+his clothes for three years, and is compelled by lack of cash to go
+without a fire in winter. Sir James Hamilton, a gentleman-in-waiting,
+gets drunk one day, and threatens to kill the Lord Chancellor. He
+is starving, and declares it is Hyde's fault that the King gives
+him no money. He will put on a clean shirt to be hanged in, and
+not run away, being without so much as a penny. Then we have the
+petition of a poor fencing-master. 'Heaven,' he writes piteously,
+'hears the groans of the lowest creatures, and therefore I trust that
+you, being a terrestrial deity, will not disdain my supplication.'
+He had come from Cologne to Bruges to teach the royal household,
+and wanted his wages, for he and his family were starving.
+
+[Illustration: BRUGES. Maison du Pélican (Almshouse).]
+
+Don John of Austria visited Charles at Bruges, and an allowance
+from the King of Spain was promised, so that men might be levied
+for the operations against Cromwell; but the payments were few
+and irregular. 'The English Court,' says a letter of February,
+1657, 'remains still at Bridges [Bruges], never in greater want,
+nor greater expectations of money, without which all their levies
+are like to be at a stand; for Englishmen cannot live on bread
+alone.'
+
+A 'Letter of Intelligence' sent from Sluis says that Charles is 'much
+loocked upon, but littell respeckted.' And this is not wonderful if
+the reports sent home by the Commonwealth agents are to be trusted.
+One of the spies who haunted the neighbourhood of Bruges was a Mr.
+Butler, who writes in the winter of 1656-1657: 'This last week
+one of the richest churches in Bruges was plundered in the night.
+The people of Bruges are fully persuaded that Charles Stewart's
+followers have done it. They spare no pains to find out the guilty,
+and if it happen to light upon any of Charles Stewart's train, it
+will mightily incense that people against them.... There is now
+a company of French comedians at Bruges, who are very punctually
+attended by Charles Stewart and his Court, and all the ladies there.
+Their most solemn day of acting is the Lord's Day. I think I may
+truly say that greater abominations were never practised among
+people than at this day at Charles Stewart's Court. Fornication,
+drunkenness, and adultery are esteemed no sins amongst them; so I
+persuade myself God will never prosper any of their attempts.'[*]
+In another letter we read that once, after a hunting expedition,
+Charles and a gentleman of the bedchamber were the only two who
+came back sober. Sir James Turner was mad when drunk, 'and that
+was pretty often,' says Bishop Burnet.
+
+[Footnote *: Letter from Mr. J. Butler, Flushing, December 2, 1656,
+Thurloe State Papers, V., 645.]
+
+But, of course, it was the business of the spies to blacken the
+character of Charles; and there can be little doubt that, in spite
+of his poverty and loose morals, he was well liked by the citizens
+of Bruges, who, notwithstanding a great deal of outward decorum, have
+at no time been very strait-laced. 'Charles,' we learn from a local
+history, 'sut se rendre populaire en prenant part aux amusements de
+la population et en se pliant, sans effort comme sans affectation,
+aux usages du pays.' During his whole period of exile he contrived
+to amuse himself. Affairs of gallantry, dancing, tennis, billiards,
+and other frivolous pursuits, occupied as much of his attention
+as the grave affairs of State over which Hyde and Ormonde spent
+so many anxious hours. When on a visit to Brussels in the spring
+of 1657, he employed, we are told, most of his time with Don John
+dancing, or at 'long paume, a Spanish play with balls filled with
+wire.' And, again: 'He passes his time with shooting at Bruges,
+and such other obscure pastimes.'
+
+This 'shooting' was the favourite Flemish sport of shooting with
+bow and arrows at an artificial bird fixed on a high pole, the
+prize being, on great occasions, a golden bird, which was hung by a
+chain of gold round the winner's neck. In the records of the Guilds
+of St. George and St. Sebastian at Bruges there are notices relating
+to Charles. The former was a society of cross-bowmen, the latter
+of archers. On June 11, 1656, Charles and the Duke of Gloucester
+were at the festival of the Society of St. George. Charles was the
+first to try his skill, and managed to hit the mark. After the
+Duke and many others had shot, Peter Pruyssenaere, a wine merchant
+in the Rue du Vieux Bourg, brought down the bird, and Charles hung
+the golden 'Bird of Honour' round his neck. On June 25 Charles
+visited the Society of St. Sebastian, when Michael Noé, a gardener,
+was the winner. The King and Gloucester both became members of
+the St. Sebastian, which is still a flourishing society. Going
+along the Rue des Carmes, the traveller passes the English convent
+on the left, and on the right, at the end of the street, comes
+to the Guild-house of St. Sebastian, with its slender tower and
+quiet garden, one of the pleasantest spots in Bruges. There the
+names of Charles and his brother are to be seen inscribed in a
+small volume bound in red morocco, the 'Bird of Honour' with its
+chain of gold, a silver arrow presented by the Duke of Gloucester,
+and some other interesting relics. On September 15, 1843, Queen
+Victoria, Prince Albert, King Leopold I., and the Queen of the
+Belgians, went to the Rue des Carmes and signed their names as
+members of this society, which now possesses two silver cups, presented
+by the Queen of England in 1845 and 1893. The Duke of York seems
+to have been successful as an archer, for in the Hôtel de Ville
+at Bruges there is a picture by John van Meuninxhove, in which
+Charles is seen hanging the 'Bird of Honour' round his brother's
+neck.
+
+In April, 1657, the English Government was informed that the Court
+of Charles was preparing to leave Bruges. 'Yesterday' (April 7)
+'some of his servants went before to Brussels to make ready lodgings
+for Charles Stewart, the Duke of York, and the Duke of Gloucester.
+All that have or can compass so much money go along with Charles
+Stewart on Monday morning. I do admire how people live here for
+want of money. Our number is not increased since my last. The most
+of them are begging again for want of money; and when any straggling
+persons come, we have not so much money as will take a single man
+to the quarters; yet we promise ourselves great matters.' They
+were hampered in all their movements by this want of hard cash,
+for Charles was in debt at Bruges, and could not remove his goods
+until he paid his creditors. It was sadly humiliating. 'The King,'
+we read, 'will hardly live at Bruges any more, but he cannot remove
+his family and goods till we get money.' The dilemma seems to have
+been settled by Charles, his brothers, and most of the Court going
+off to Brussels, leaving their possessions behind them. The final
+move did not take place till February, 1658, and Clarendon says that
+Charles never lived at Bruges after that date. He may, however, have
+returned on a short visit, for Jesse, in his _Memoirs of the Court Of
+England under the Stuarts_, states that the King was playing tennis
+at Bruges when Sir Stephen Fox came to him with the great news, 'The
+devil is dead!' This would be in September, 1658, Cromwell having
+died on the third of that month. After the Restoration Charles sent
+to the citizens of Bruges a letter of thanks for the way in which
+they had received him. Nor did he forget, amidst the pleasures of
+the Court at Whitehall, the simple pastimes of the honest burghers,
+but presented to the archers of the Society of St. Sebastian the
+sum of 3,600 florins, which were expended on their hall of meeting.
+
+More than a hundred years later, when the Stuart dynasty was a thing
+of the past and George III. was seated on the throne of England,
+the Rue Haute saw the arrival of some travellers who were very
+different from the roystering Cavaliers and frail beauties who had
+made it gay in the days of the Merry Monarch. The English Jesuits
+of St. Omer, when expelled from their college, came to Bruges in
+August, 1762, and took up their abode in the House of the Seven
+Towers, where they found 'nothing but naked walls and empty chambers.'
+A miserable place it must have been. 'In one room a rough table of
+planks had been set up, and the famished travellers were rejoiced
+at the sight of three roast legs of mutton set on the primitive
+table. Knives, forks, and plates there were none. A Flemish servant
+divided the food with his pocket-knife. A farthing candle gave
+a Rembrandt-like effect to the scene. The boys slept that night
+on mattresses laid on the floor of one of the big empty rooms of
+the house. The first days at Bruges were cheerless enough.'[*]
+The religious houses, however, came to the rescue. Flemish monks
+and the nuns of the English convent helped the pilgrims, and the
+Jesuits soon established themselves at Bruges, where they remained
+in peace for a few years, till the Austrian Government drove them
+out. The same fate overtook the inmates of many monasteries and
+convents at Bruges in the reign of Joseph II., whose reforming
+zeal led to that revolt of the Austrian Netherlands which was the
+prelude to the invasion of Flanders by the army of the French
+Revolution.
+
+[Footnote *: Robinson, _Bruges, an Historical Sketch_, p. 291.]
+
+After the conquest of Belgium by the French it looked as if all
+the churches in Bruges were doomed. The Chapel of St. Basil was
+laid in ruins. The Church of St. Donatian, which had stood since
+the days of Baldwin Bras-de-Fer, was pulled down and disappeared
+entirely. Notre Dame, St. Sauveur, and other places of worship,
+narrowly escaped destruction; and it was not till the middle of
+the nineteenth century that the town recovered, in some measure,
+from these disasters.
+
+Bruges has doubtless shared in the general prosperity which has
+spread over the country since Belgium became an independent kingdom
+after the revolution of 1830, but its progress has been slow. It
+has never lost its old-world associations; and the names of the
+streets and squares, and the traditions connected with numberless
+houses which a stranger might pass without notice, are all so many
+links with the past. There is the Rue Espagnole, for example, where
+a vegetable market is held every Wednesday. This was the quarter
+where the Spanish merchants lived and did their business. There
+used to be a tall, dark, and, in fact, very dirty-looking old house
+in this street known by the Spanish name of the 'Casa Negra.' It
+was pulled down a few years ago; but lower down, at the foot of
+the street, the great cellars in which the Spaniards stored their
+goods remain; and on the Quai Espagnol was the Spanish Consulate,
+now a large dwelling-house. A few steps from the Quai Espagnol is
+the Place des Orientaux (Oosterlingen Plaats), where a minaret of
+tawny brick rises above the gables of what was once the Consulate
+of Smyrna, and on the north side of which, in the brave days of
+old, stood the splendid Maison des Orientaux, the headquarters
+of the Hanseatic League in Bruges, the finest house in Flanders,
+with turrets and soaring spire, and marvellous façade, and rooms
+inside all ablaze with gilding. The glory has departed; two modern
+dwelling-houses have taken the place of this commercial palace;
+but it must surely be a very dull imagination on which the sight
+of this spot, now so tranquil and commonplace, but once the centre
+of such important transactions, makes no impression. From the Place
+des Orientaux it is only a few minutes' stroll to the Rue Cour
+de Gand and the dark brown wooden front of the small house, now
+a lace shop, which tradition says was one of Memlinc's homes in
+Bruges, where we can fancy him, laboriously and with loving care,
+putting the last minute touches to some immortal painting.
+
+Then there is the Rue Anglaise, off the Quai Spinola, where the
+English Merchant Adventurers met to discuss their affairs in houses
+with such names as 'Old England' or 'The Tower of London.' The
+head of the colony, 'Governor of the English Nation beyond the
+Seas' they called him, was a very busy man 400 years ago.[*] The
+Scottish merchants were settled in the same district, close to
+the Church of Ste. Walburge. They called their house 'Scotland,'
+and doubtless made as good bargains as the 'auld enemy' in the
+next street. There is a building called the Parijssche Halle, or
+Halle de Paris, hidden away among the houses to the west of the
+Market-Place, with a café and a theatre where Flemish plays are acted
+now, which was formerly the Consulate of France; and subscription
+balls and amateur theatricals are given by the English residents of
+to-day in the fourteenth-century house of the Genoese merchants
+in the Rue Flamande. The list of streets and houses with old-time
+associations like these might be extended indefinitely, for in
+Bruges the past is ever present.
+
+[Footnote *: In the _Flandria Illustrata_ of Sanderus, vol. i.,
+p. 275, there is a picture of the 'Domus Anglorum.']
+
+[Illustration: BRUGES. Vegetable Market.]
+
+Even the flat-fronted, plain houses with which poverty or the bad
+taste of the last century replaced many of the older buildings
+do not spoil the picturesque appearance of the town as a whole,
+because it is no larger now than it was 600 years ago, and these
+modern structures are quite lost amongst their venerable neighbours.
+Thus Bruges retains its mediæval character. In the midst, however,
+of all this wealth of architectural beauty and historical interest,
+the atmosphere of common everyday life seems to be so very dull and
+depressing that people living there are apt to be driven, by sheer
+boredom, into spending their lives in a round of small excitements
+and incessant, wearisome gossip, and into taking far more interest
+in the paltry squabbles of their neighbours over some storm in
+a teacup than in the more important topics which invigorate the
+minds of men and women in healthier and broader societies. Long
+before Rodenbach's romance was written this peculiarity of Bruges
+was proverbial throughout Belgium.
+
+But it is possible that a change is at hand, and that Bruges may
+once again become, not the Venice of the North--the time for that is
+past--but an important town, for the spirit of commercial enterprise
+which has done so much for other parts of Belgium during the last
+seventy-five years is now invading even this quiet place, whose
+citizens have begun to dream of recovering some portion of their
+former prosperity. In 1895 the Belgian Parliament passed a law
+providing for the construction, between Blankenberghe and Heyst,
+of a harbour connected with Bruges by a canal of large dimensions,
+and of an inner port at the town. The works at See-Brugge, as the
+outer port is called, are nearly completed, and will allow vessels
+drawing 26-1/2 feet of water to float at any state of the tide.
+The jetty describes a large curve, and the bend is such that its
+extremity is parallel to the coast, and 930 yards distant from
+the low-water mark. The sheltered roadstead is about 272 acres in
+extent, and communication is made with the canal by a lock 66 feet
+wide and 282 yards in length. From this point the canal, which has a
+depth of 26-1/2 feet and is fed by sea-water, runs in a straight
+line to Bruges, and ends at the inner port, which is within a few
+hundred yards of where the Roya used to meet the Zwijn. It is capable
+of affording a minimum capacity of 1,000,000 tons per annum, and
+the whole equipment has been fitted up necessary for dealing with
+this amount of traffic.
+
+The first ship, an English steamer, entered the new port at Bruges
+on the morning of May 29 in the present year (1905). The carillon
+rung from the Belfry, guns were fired, and a ceremony in honour
+of the event took place in the Hôtel de Ville. It now remains to
+be seen whether any part of the trade which was lost 400 years ago
+can be recovered by the skill of modern engineers and the resources
+of modern capital.
+
+
+
+
+THE PLAIN OF WEST FLANDERS--YPRES
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VII
+
+THE PLAIN OF WEST FLANDERS--YPRES
+
+To the west of Bruges the wide plain of Flanders extends to the
+French frontier. Church spires and windmills are the most prominent
+objects in the landscape; but though the flatness of the scenery is
+monotonous, there is something pleasing to the eye in the endless
+succession of well-cultivated fields, interrupted at intervals by
+patches of rough bushland, canals, or slow-moving streams winding
+between rows of pollards, country houses embowered in woods and
+pleasure-grounds, cottages with fruitful gardens, orchards, small
+villages, and compact little towns, in most of which the diligent
+antiquary will find something of interest--a modest belfry, perhaps,
+with a romance of its own; a parish church, whose foundations were
+laid long ago in ground dedicated, in the distant past, to the
+worship of Thor or Woden; or the remains, it may be, of a mediæval
+castle, from which some worthy knight, whose name is forgotten
+except in local traditions, rode away to the Crusades.
+
+This part of West Flanders, which lies wedged in between the coast,
+with its populous bathing stations, and the better-known district
+immediately to the south of it, where Ghent, Tournai, Courtrai,
+and other important centres draw many travellers every year, is
+seldom visited by strangers, who are almost as much stared at in
+some of the villages as they would be in the streets of Pekin. It
+is, however, very accessible. The roads are certainly far from
+good, and anything in the shape of a walking tour is out of the
+question, for the strongest pedestrian would have all his pleasure
+spoilt by the hard-going of the long, straight causeway. The ideal
+way to see the Netherlands and study the life of the people is
+to travel on the canals; but these are not so numerous here as
+in other parts of the country, and, besides, it is not very easy
+to arrange for a passage on the barges. But, in addition to the
+main lines of the State Railway, there are the 'Chemins-de-fer
+Vicinaux,' or light district railways, which run through all parts
+of Belgium. The fares on these are very low, and there are so many
+stoppages that the traveller can see a great many places in the
+course of a single day. There are cycle tracks, too, alongside
+most of the roads, the cost of keeping them in order being paid
+out of the yearly tax paid by the owners of bicycles.[*]
+
+[Footnote *: Bicycles entering Belgium pay an _ad valorem_ duty
+of 12 per cent.]
+
+[Illustration: THE FLEMISH PLAIN]
+
+This is the most purely Flemish part of Flanders. One very seldom
+notices that Spanish type of face which is so common elsewhere--at
+Antwerp, for instance. Here the race is almost unmixed, and the
+peasants speak nothing but Flemish to each other. Many of them
+do not understand a word of French, though in Belgium French is,
+as everyone knows, the language of public life and of literature.
+The newspapers published in Flemish are small, and do not contain
+much beyond local news. The result is that the country people in
+West Flanders know very little of what is going on in the world
+beyond their own parishes. The standard of education is low, being
+to a great extent in the hands of the clergy, who have hitherto
+succeeded in defeating all proposals for making it universal and
+compulsory.
+
+But, steeped as most of them are in ignorance and superstition,
+the agricultural labourers of West Flanders are, to all appearance,
+quite contented with their lot. Living is cheap, and their wants
+are few. Coffee, black bread, potatoes, and salted pork, are the
+chief articles of diet, and in some households even the pork is a
+treat for special occasions. They seldom taste butter, using lard
+instead; and the 'margarine' which is sold in the towns does not
+find its way into the cottages of the outlying country districts.
+Sugar has for many years been much dearer than in England, and the
+price is steadily rising, but with this exception the food of the
+people is cheap. Tea enters Belgium duty free, but the peasants
+never use it. Many villagers smoke coarse tobacco grown in their own
+gardens, and a 10-centimes cigar is the height of luxury. Tobacco
+being a State monopoly in France, the high price in that country
+makes smuggling common, and there is a good deal of contraband
+trading carried on in a quiet way on the frontiers of West Flanders.
+The average wage paid for field labour is from 1 franc 50 centimes
+to 2 francs a day for married men--that is to say, from about 1s.
+3d. to 1s. 8d. of English money. Bachelors generally receive 1
+franc (10d.) a day and their food. The working hours are long,
+often from five in the morning till eight in the evening in summer,
+and in winter from sunrise till sunset, with one break at twelve
+o'clock for dinner, consisting of bread with pork and black coffee,
+and another about four in the afternoon, when what remains of the
+mid-day meal is consumed.
+
+The Flemish farmhouse is generally a substantial building, with
+two large living-rooms, in which valuable old pieces of furniture
+are still occasionally to be found, though the curiosity dealers
+have, during the last quarter of a century, carried most of them
+away, polished them up, and sold them at a high profit. Carved
+chests, bearing the arms of ancient families, have been discovered
+lying full of rubbish in barns or stables, and handsome cabinets,
+with fine mouldings and brass fittings, have frequently been picked
+up for a few francs. The heavy beams of the ceilings, black with
+age, the long Flemish stoves, and the quaint window-seats deeply
+sunk in the thick walls, still remain, and make the interiors of many
+of these houses very picturesque; but the 'finds' of old furniture,
+curious brass or pewter dishes, and even stray bits of valuable
+tapestry, which used to rouse the cupidity of strangers, are now
+very rare. Almost all the brass work which is so eagerly bought by
+credulous tourists at Bruges in summer is bran-new stuff cleverly
+manufactured for sale--and sold it is at five or six times its
+real market value! There are no bargains to be picked up on the
+Dyver or in the shops of Bruges.
+
+[Illustration: DUINHOEK. Interior of a Farmhouse.]
+
+The country life is simple. A good deal of hard drinking goes on
+in most villages. More beer, probably, is consumed in Belgium per
+head of the population than in any other European country, Germany
+not excepted, and the system of swallowing 'little glasses' of fiery
+spirit on the top of beer brings forth its natural fruits. The
+drunken ways of the people are encouraged by the excessive number
+of public-houses. Practically anyone who can pay the Government
+fee and obtain a barrel of beer and a few tumblers may open a
+drinking-shop. It is not uncommon in a small country village with
+about 200 inhabitants to see the words 'Herberg' or 'Estaminet' over
+the doors of a dozen houses, in which beer is sold at a penny (or
+less) for a large glass, and where various throat-burning liquors
+of the _petit verre_ species can be had at the same price; and
+the result is that very often a great portion of the scanty wage
+paid on Saturday evening is melted into beer or gin on Sunday and
+Monday. As a rule, the Flemish labourer, being a merry, light-hearted
+soul, is merely noisy and jovial in a brutal sort of way in his
+cups; but let a quarrel arise, out come the knives, and before
+the rural policeman saunters along there are nasty rows, ending
+in wounds and sometimes in murder. When the lots are drawn for
+military service, and crowds of country lads with their friends
+flock into the towns, the public-houses do good business. Those
+who have drawn lucky numbers, and so escaped the conscription,
+get drunk out of joy; while those who find they must serve in the
+army drown their sorrow, or celebrate the occasion if they are
+of a martial turn, by reeling about the streets arm in arm with
+their companions, shouting and singing. Whole families, old and
+young alike, often join in these performances, and they must be
+very drunk and very disorderly before the police think of making
+even the mildest remonstrance.
+
+The gay character of the Flemings is best seen at the 'kermesse,'
+or fair, which is held in almost every village during summer. At
+Bruges, Ypres, and Furnes, and still more in such large cities
+as Brussels or Antwerp, the kermesse has ceased to be typical of
+the country, and is supplanted by fairs such as may be seen in
+England or in almost any other country. 'Merry-go-rounds' driven
+by steam, elaborate circuses, menageries, waxwork exhibitions,
+movable theatres, and modern 'shows' of every kind travel about,
+and settle for a few days, perhaps even for a few weeks, in various
+towns. The countryfolk of the surrounding district are delighted,
+and the showmen reap a goodly harvest of francs and centimes; but
+these fairs are tiresome and commonplace, much less amusing and
+lively than, for example, St. Giles's Fair at Oxford, though very
+nearly as noisy. But the kermesse proper, which still survives in
+some places, shows the Flemings amusing themselves in something
+more like the old fashion than anything which can be seen in the
+Market-Place of Bruges or on the boulevards of Brussels or Antwerp.
+Indeed, some of the village scenes, when the young people are dancing
+or shooting with bows and arrows at the mark, while the elders sit,
+with their mugs of beer and long pipes, watching and gossiping,
+are very like what took place in the times of the old painters who
+were so fond of producing pictures of the kermesses. The dress of
+the people, of course, is different, but the spirit of the scene,
+with its homely festivities, is wonderfully little changed.
+
+About twenty miles from the French frontier is the town of Ypres,
+once the capital of Flanders, and which in the time of Louis of Nevers
+was one of the three 'bonnes villes,' Bruges and Ghent being the
+others, which appointed deputies to defend the rights and privileges
+of the whole Flemish people.
+
+As Bruges grew out of the rude fortress on the banks of the Roya,
+so Ypres developed from a stronghold built, probably about the year
+900, on a small island in the river Yperlee. It was triangular
+in shape, with a tower at each corner, and was at first known by
+the inhabitants of the surrounding plain as the 'Castle of the
+Three Towers.' In course of time houses began to appear on the
+banks of the river near the island. A rampart of earth with a ditch
+defended these, and as the place grew, the outworks became more
+extensive. Owing to its strategic position, near France and in a
+part of Flanders which was constantly the scene of war, it was of
+great importance; and probably no other Flemish town has seen its
+defences so frequently altered and enlarged as Ypres has between
+the primitive days when the Crusading Thierry d'Alsace planted
+hedges of live thorns to strengthen the towers, and the reign of
+Louis XIV., when a vast and elaborate system of fortifications
+was constructed on scientific principles, under the direction of
+Vauban.
+
+The citizens of Ypres took a prominent part in most of the great
+events which distinguished the heroic period of Flemish history. In
+July, 1302, a contingent of 1,200 chosen men, '500 of them clothed
+in scarlet and the rest in black,' were set to watch the town and
+castle of Courtrai during the Battle of the Golden Spurs, and in
+the following year the victory was celebrated by the institution
+of the Confraternity of the Archers of St. Sebastian, which still
+exists at Ypres, the last survivor of the armed societies which
+flourished there during the Middle Ages. Seven hundred burghers
+of Ypres marched to Sluis, embarked in the Flemish boats which
+harassed the French fleet during the naval fight of June, 1340,
+and at the close of the campaign formed themselves into the
+Confraternity of St. Michael, which lasted till the French invasion
+of 1794. Forty years later we find no fewer than 5,000 of the men
+of Ypres, who had now changed their politics, on the French side
+at the Battle of Roosebeke, fighting in the thick mist upon the
+plain between Ypres and Roulers on that fatal day which saw the
+death of Philip van Artevelde and the triumph of the Leliarts.
+
+[Illustration: ADINKERQUE. At the Kermesse.]
+
+Next year, so unceasingly did the tide of war flow over the plain
+of Flanders, an English army, commanded by Henry Spencer, Bishop
+of Norwich, landed at Calais under the pretext of supporting the
+partisans of Pope Urban VI., who then occupied the Holy See, against
+the adherents of Pope Clement VII., who had established himself at
+Avignon. The burghers of Ghent flocked to the English standard,
+and the allies laid siege to Ypres, which was defended by the French
+and the Leliarts, who followed Louis of Maele, Count of Flanders,
+and maintained the cause of Clement.
+
+At that time the gateways were the only part of the fortifications
+made of stone. The ramparts were of earth, planted on the exterior
+slope with a thick mass of thorn-bushes, interlaced and strengthened
+by posts. Outside there were more defences of wooden stockades,
+and beyond them two ditches, divided by a dyke, on which was a
+palisade of pointed stakes. The town, thus fortified, was defended
+by about 10,000 men, and un June 8, 1383, the siege was begun by
+a force consisting of 17,000 English and 20,000 Flemings of the
+national party, most of whom came from Bruges and Ghent.
+
+The English had been told that the town would not offer a strong
+resistance, and on the first day of the siege 1,000 of them tried
+to carry it at once by assault. They were repulsed; and after that
+assaults by the besiegers and sorties by the garrison continued
+day after day, the loss of life on both sides being very great.
+At last the besiegers, finding that they could not, in the face of
+the shower of arrows, javelins, and stones which met them, break
+through the palisades and the sharp thorn fences (those predecessors
+of the barbed-wire entanglements of to-day), force the gates, or
+carry the ramparts, built three wooden towers mounted on wheels,
+and pushed them full of soldiers up to the gates. But the garrison
+made a sortie, seized the towers, destroyed them, and killed or
+captured the soldiers who manned them.
+
+Spencer on several occasions demanded the surrender of the town,
+but all his proposals were rejected. The English pressed closer and
+closer, but were repulsed with heavy losses whenever they delivered
+an assault. The hopes of the garrison rose high on August 7, the
+sixty-first day of the siege, when news arrived that a French army,
+100,000 strong, accompanied by the forces of the Count of Flanders,
+was marching to the relief of Ypres. Early next morning the English
+made a fresh attempt to force their way into the town, but they
+were once more driven back. A little later in the day they twice
+advanced with the utmost bravery. Again they were beaten back.
+So were the burghers of Ghent, whom the English reproached for
+having deceived them by saying that Ypres would fall in three days,
+and whose answer to this accusation was, a furious attack on one
+of the gates, in which many of them fell. In the afternoon the
+English again advanced, and succeeded in forcing their way through
+part of the formidable thorn hedge; but it was of no avail, and once
+more they had to retire, leaving heaps of dead behind them. After
+a rest of some hours, another attack was made on seven different
+parts of the town at the same time. This assault was the most furious
+and bloody of the siege, but it was the last. Spencer saw that, in
+spite of the splendid courage of his soldiers and of the Flemish
+burghers, it would be impossible to take the town before the French
+army arrived, and during the night the English, with their allies
+from Ghent and Bruges, retired from before Ypres. The failure of
+this campaign left Flanders at the mercy of France; but the death
+of Count Louis of Maele, which took place in January, 1384, brought
+in the House of Burgundy, under whose rule the Flemings enjoyed
+a long period of prosperity and almost complete independence.
+
+It was believed in Ypres that the town had been saved by the
+intercession of the Virgin Mary, its patron saint. In the Cathedral
+Church of St. Martin the citizens set up an image of Notre,
+Dame-de-Thuine, that is, Our Lady of the Enclosures, an allusion
+to the strong barrier of thorns which had kept the enemy at bay;
+and a kermesse, appointed to be held on the first Sunday of August
+every year in commemoration of the siege, received the name of
+the 'Thuindag,' or Day of the Enclosures.[*] The people of Ypres,
+though they fought on the French side, had good reason to be proud
+of the way in which they defended their homes; but the consequences
+of the siege were disastrous, for the commerce of the town never
+recovered the loss of the large working-class population which
+left it at that time.
+
+[Footnote *: 'Thuin,' or 'tuin,' in Flemish means an enclosed space,
+such as a garden plot.]
+
+[Illustration: A FARMSTEADING]
+
+The religious troubles of the sixteenth century left their mark
+on Ypres as well as on the rest of Flanders. Everyone has read
+the glowing sentences in which the historian of the Dutch Republic
+describes the Cathedral of Antwerp, and tells how it was wrecked
+by the reformers during the image-breaking in the summer of 1566.
+What happened on the banks of the Scheldt appeals most to the
+imagination; but all over Flanders the statues and the shrines,
+the pictures and the stores of ecclesiastical wealth, with which
+piety, or superstition, or penitence had enriched so many churches
+and religious houses, became the objects of popular fury. There
+had been field-preaching near Ypres as early as 1562.[*] Other
+parts of West Flanders had been visited by the apostles of the New
+Learning, and on August 15, 1566, the reformers swept down upon
+Ypres and sacked the churches.
+
+[Footnote *: Motley, _Rise of the Dutch Republic_, part ii., chapter
+vi.]
+
+In the awful tragedy which soon followed, when Parma came upon
+the scene, that 'spectacle of human energy, human suffering, and
+human strength to suffer, such as has not often been displayed
+upon the stage of the world's events' the town had its share of
+the persecutions and exactions which followed the march of the
+Spanish soldiery; but for more than ten years a majority of the
+burghers adhered to the cause of Philip. In July, 1578, however,
+Ypres fell into the hands of the Protestants, and became their
+headquarters in West Flanders. Five years later Alexander of Parma
+besieged it. The siege lasted until April of the following year,
+when the Protestants, worn out by famine, capitulated, and the town
+was occupied by the Spaniards, who 'resorted to instant measures
+for cleansing a place which had been so long in the hands of the
+infidels, and, as the first step towards this purification, the
+bodies of many heretics who had been buried for years were taken
+from their graves and publicly hanged in their coffins. All living
+adherents to the Reformed religion were instantly expelled from
+the place.'[*] By this time the population was reduced to 5,000
+souls, and the fortifications were a heap of ruins.
+
+[Footnote *: Motley, _Rise of the Dutch Republic_, part ii., chapter
+vi.]
+
+[Illustration: YPRES. Place du Musée (showing Top Part of the Belfry).]
+
+A grim memorial of those troublous times is still preserved at
+Ypres. The Place du Musée is a quiet corner of the town, where a
+Gothic house with double gables contains a collection of old paintings,
+medals, instruments of torture, and some other curiosities. It was
+the Bishop of Ypres who, at midnight on June 4, 1568, announced to
+Count Egmont, in his prison at Brussels, that his hour had come; and
+the cross-hilted sword, with its long straight blade, which hangs
+on the wall of the Museum is the sword with which the executioner
+'severed his head from his shoulders at a single blow' on the following
+morning. The same weapon, a few minutes later, was used for the
+despatch of Egmont's friend, Count Horn.
+
+Before the end of that dismal sixteenth century Flanders regained
+some of the liberties for which so much blood had been shed; but
+while the Protestant Dutch Republic rose in the north, the 'Catholic'
+or 'Spanish' Netherlands in the south remained in the possession
+of Spain until the marriage of Philip's daughter Isabella to the
+Archduke Albert, when these provinces were given as a marriage
+portion to the bride. This was in 1599. Though happier times followed
+under the moderate rule of Albert and Isabella, war continued to
+be the incessant scourge of Flanders, and during the marching and
+countermarching of armies across this battlefield of Europe, Ypres
+scarcely ever knew what peace meant. Four times besieged and four
+times taken by the French in the wars of Louis XIV., the town had
+no rest; and for miles all round it the fields were scarred by the
+new system of attacking strong places which Vauban had introduced
+into the art of war. Louis, accompanied by Schomberg and Luxembourg,
+was himself present at the siege of 1678; and Ypres, having been ceded
+to France by the Treaty of Nimeguen in that year, was afterwards
+strengthened by fortifications constructed from plans furnished by
+the great French engineer.[*]
+
+[Footnote *: Letter from Vauban to Louvois on the fortifications
+of Ypres, 1689; Vereecke, pp. 325-357.]
+
+In the year 1689 Vauban speaks of Ypres as a place 'formerly great,
+populous, and busy, but much reduced by the frequent sedition and
+revolts of its inhabitants, and by the great wars which it has
+endured.' And in this condition it has remained ever since. Though
+the period which followed the Treaty of Rastadt in 1714, when Flanders
+passed into the possession of the Emperor Charles VI., and became
+a part of the 'Austrian Netherlands,' was a period of considerable
+improvement, Ypres never recovered its position, not even during
+the peaceful reign of the Empress Maria Theresa. The revolution
+against Joseph II. disturbed everything, and in June, 1794, the town
+yielded, after a short siege, to the army of the French Republic.
+The name of Flanders disappeared from the map of Europe. The whole of
+Belgium was divided, like France, with which it was now incorporated,
+into _départements_, Ypres being in the Department of the Lys. For
+twenty years, during the wars of the Republic, the Consulate, and
+the Empire, though the conscription was a constant drain upon the
+youth of Flanders, who went away to leave their bones on foreign
+soil, nothing happened to disturb the quiet of the town, and the
+fortifications were falling into decay when the return of Napoleon
+from Elba set Europe in a blaze. During the Hundred Days guns and
+war material were hurried over from England, the old defences were
+restored, and new works constructed by the English engineers; but
+the Battle of Waterloo rendered these preparations unnecessary, and
+the military history of Ypres came to an end when the short-lived
+Kingdom of the Netherlands was established by the Congress of Vienna,
+though it was nominally a place of arms till 1852, when the
+fortifications were destroyed. Nowadays everything is very quiet
+and unwarlike. The bastions and lunettes, the casemates and moats,
+which spread in every direction round the town, have almost entirely
+disappeared, and those parts of the fortifications which remain
+have been turned into ornamental walks.[*]
+
+[Footnote *: The evolution of Ypres from a feudal tower on an island
+until it became a great fortress can be traced in a very interesting
+volume of maps and plans published by M. Vereecke in 1858, as a
+supplement to his _Histoire Militaire d'Ypres_. It shows the first
+defensive works, those erected by Vauban, the state of the
+fortifications between 1794 and 1814, and what the English engineers
+did in 1815.]
+
+But while so little remains of the works which were constructed,
+at such a cost and with so much labour, for the purposes of war,
+the arts of peace, which once flourished at Ypres, have left a
+more enduring monument. There is nothing in Bruges or any other
+Flemish town which can compare for massive grandeur with the pile
+of buildings at the west end of the Grand Place of Ypres. During
+two centuries the merchants of Flanders, whose towns were the chief
+centres of Western commerce and civilization, grew to be the richest
+in Europe, and a great portion of the wealth which industry and
+public spirit had accumulated was spent in erecting those noble
+civic and commercial buildings which are still the glory of Flanders.
+The foundation-stone of the Halle des Drapiers, or Cloth Hall, of
+Ypres was laid by Baldwin of Constantinople, then Count of Flanders,
+at the beginning of the thirteenth century, but more than 100 years
+had passed away before it was completed. Though the name of the
+architect who began it is unknown, the unity of design which
+characterizes the work makes it probable that the original plans
+were adhered to till the whole was finished. Nothing could be simpler
+than the general idea; but the effect is very fine. The ground-floor
+of the façade, about 150 yards long, is pierced by a number of
+rectangular doors, over which are two rows of pointed windows,
+each exactly above the other, and all of the same style. In the
+upper row every second window is filled up, and contains the statue
+of some historical character. At each end there is a turret; and
+the belfry, a square with towers at the corners, rises from the
+centre of the building.
+
+Various additions have been made from time to time to the original
+Halle des Drapiers since it was finished in the year 1304, and of
+these the 'Nieuwerck' is the most interesting. The east end of the
+Halle was for a long time hidden by a number of wooden erections,
+which, having been put up for various purposes after the main building
+was finished, were known as the 'Nieuwe wercken,' or new works.
+They were pulled down in the beginning of the seventeenth century,
+and replaced by the stone edifice, in the style of the Spanish
+Renaissance, which now goes by the name of the Nieuwerck, with its
+ten shapely arches supported by slender pillars, above whose sculptured
+capitals rise tiers of narrow windows and the steeply-pitched roof
+with gables of curiously carved stone. Ypres had ceased to be a
+great commercial city long before the Nieuwerck was built; but the
+Cloth Hall was a busy place during the thirteenth and fourteenth
+centuries, when Ypres shared with Bruges the responsibility of
+managing the Flemish branch of the Hanseatic League.
+
+The extensive system of monopolies which the League maintained
+was, as a matter of course, the cause of much jealousy and bad
+feeling. In Flanders, Ghent, Bruges, and Ypres defended their own
+privileges against other towns, and quarrelled amongst themselves.
+The merchants of Ypres had a monopoly which forbade all weaving for
+three leagues round the town, under a penalty of fifty livres and
+confiscation of the looms and linen woven; but the weavers in the
+neighbouring communes infringed this monopoly, and sold imitations of
+Ypres linen cloth on all hands. There was constant trouble between
+the people of Ypres and their neighbours at Poperinghe. Sometimes
+the weavers of Ypres, to enforce their exclusive privileges, marched
+in arms against Poperinghe, and sometimes the men of Poperinghe
+retaliated by attacking their powerful rivals. Houses were burnt,
+looms were broken up, and lives were lost in these struggles, which
+were so frequent that for a long time something like a chronic
+state of war existed between the two places.
+
+[Illustration: YPRES. Arcade under the Nieuwerk.]
+
+Besides the troubles caused by the jealousy of other towns, intestine
+disputes arising out of the perpetual contest between labour and
+capital went on from year to year within the walls of Ypres. There,
+as in the other Flemish towns, a sharp line was drawn between the
+working man, by whose hands the linen was actually woven, and the
+merchants, members of the Guilds, by whom it was sold. In these
+towns, which maintained armies and made treaties of peace, and whose
+friendship was sought by princes and statesmen, the artisans, whose
+industry contributed so much to the importance of the community,
+resented any infringement of their legal rights. By law the magistrates
+of Ypres were elected annually, and because this had not been done
+in 1361 the people rose in revolt against the authorities. The mob
+invaded the Hôtel de Ville, where the magistrates were assembled.
+The Baillie, Jean Deprysenaere, trusting to his influence as the
+local representative of the Count of Flanders, left the council
+chamber, and tried to appease the rioters. He was set upon and
+killed. Then the crowd rushed into the council chamber, seized
+the other magistrates, and locked them up in the belfry, where
+they remained prisoners for some days. The leaders of the revolt
+met, and resolved to kill their prisoners, and this sentence was
+executed on the Burgomaster and two of the Sheriffs, who were beheaded
+in front of the Halle in the presence of their colleagues.[*] It
+was by such stern deeds that the fierce democracy of the Flemish
+communes preserved their rights.
+
+[Footnote *: Vereecke, p. 41.]
+
+Each town, however, stood for itself alone. The idea of government
+by the populace on the marketplace was common to them all, but they
+were kept apart by the exclusive spirit of commercial jealousy.
+The thirst for material prosperity consumed them; but they had no
+bond of union, and each was ready to advance its own interests
+at the expense of its rivals. Therefore, either in the face of
+foreign invasion, or when the policy of some Count led to revolt
+and civil war, it was seldom that the people of Flanders were united.
+'L'Union fait la Force' is the motto of modern Belgium, but in the
+Middle Ages there was no powerful central authority round which the
+communes rallied. Hence the spectacle of Ghent helping an English
+army to storm the ramparts of Ypres, or of the Guildsmen of Bruges
+girding on their swords to strike a blow for Count Louis of Maele
+against the White Hoods who marched from Ghent. Hence the permanent
+unrest of these Flemish towns, the bickerings and the sheddings of
+blood, the jealousy of trade pitted against trade or of harbour
+against harbour, the insolence in the hour of triumph and the abject
+submission in the hour of defeat, and all the evils which discord
+brought upon the country. No town suffered more than Ypres from
+the distracted state of Flanders, which, combined with the ravages
+of war and the religious dissensions of the sixteenth century,
+reduced it from the first rank amongst the cities of the Netherlands
+to something very like the condition of a quiet country town in an
+out-of-the-way corner of England. That is what the Ypres of to-day
+is like--a sleepy country town, with clean, well-kept streets, dull
+and uninteresting save for the stately Cloth Hall, which stands
+there a silent memorial of the past.
+
+
+
+
+FURNES--THE PROCESSION OF PENITENTS
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VIII
+
+FURNES--THE PROCESSION OF PENITENTS
+
+The traveller wandering amongst the towns and villages in this
+corner of West Flanders is apt to feel that he is on a kind of
+sentimental journey as he moves from place to place, and finds
+himself everywhere surrounded by things which belong to the past
+rather than to the present. The very guidebooks are eloquent if we
+read between the lines. This place 'was formerly of much greater
+importance.' That 'was formerly celebrated for its tapestries.'
+From this Hôtel de Ville 'the numerous statuettes with which the
+building was once embellished have all disappeared.' The tower
+of that church has been left unfinished for the last 500 years.
+'Fuimus' might be written on them all. And so, some twenty miles
+north of Ypres, on a plain which in the seventeenth century was
+so studded with earthen redoubts and serrated by long lines of
+field-works and ditches that the whole countryside between Ypres
+and Dunkirk was virtually one vast entrenched camp, we come to
+the town of Furnes, another of the places on which time has laid
+its heavy hand.
+
+The early history of Furnes is obscure, though it is generally
+supposed to have grown up round a fortress erected by Baldwin
+Bras-de-Fer to check the inroads of the Normans. It suffered much,
+like its neighbours, from wars and revolutions,[*] and is now one
+of the quietest of the Flemish towns. The market-place is a small
+square, quaintly picturesque, surrounded by clusters of little
+brick houses with red and blue tiled roofs, low-stepped gables,
+and deep mouldings round the windows. Behind these dwelling-places
+the bold flying buttresses of the Church of Ste. Walburge, whose
+relics were brought to Furnes by Judith, wife of Baldwin Bras-de-Fer,
+and the tower of St. Nicholas, lift themselves on the north and
+east; and close together in a corner to the west are the dark gray
+Hôtel de Ville and Palais de Justice, in a room of which the judges
+of the Inquisition used to sit.
+
+[Footnote *: 'Furnes était devenue un _oppidium_, aux termes d'une
+charte de 1183, qui avait à se défendre à la fois contre les incursions
+des étrangers et les attaques d'une population "indocile et cruelle,"
+comme l'appelle l'Abbé de Saint Riquier Hariulf, toujours déchirée
+par les factions et toujours prête à la révolte.'--GILLIODTS VAN
+SEVEREN: _Recueil des Anciennes Coutumes de la Belgique; Quartier
+de Furnes_, vol. i., p. 28.]
+
+[Illustration: FURNES. Grand Place and Belfry.]
+
+Though some features are common to nearly all the Flemish towns--the
+market-place, the belfry, the Hôtel de Ville, the old gateways,
+and the churches, with their cherished paintings--yet each of them
+has generally some association of its own. In Bruges we think of
+how the merchants bought and sold, how the gorgeous city rose,
+clothed itself in all the colours of the rainbow, glittered for
+a time, and sank in darkness. In the crowded streets of modern
+Ghent, the busy capital of East Flanders, we seem to catch a glimpse
+of bold Jacques van Artevelde shouldering his way up to the Friday
+Market, or of turbulent burghers gathering there to set Pope, or
+Count of Flanders, or King of Spain at defiance. Ypres and its flat
+meadows suggest one of the innumerable paintings of the Flemish
+wars, the 'battle-pieces' in which the Court artists took such
+pride: the town walls with ditch and glacis before them, and within
+them the narrow-fronted houses, and the flag flying from steeple
+or belfry; the clumsy cannon puffing out clouds of smoke; the King
+of France capering on a fat horse and holding up his baton in an
+attitude of command in the foreground; and in the distance the
+tents of the camp, where the travelling theatre was set up, and
+the musicians fiddled, and an army of serving-men waited on the
+rouged and powdered ladies who had followed the army into Flanders.
+
+[Illustration: FURNES. Peristyle of Town Hall and Palais de Justice.]
+
+Furnes, somehow, always recalls the Spanish period. The Hôtel de
+Ville, a very beautiful example of the Renaissance style, with
+its rare hangings of Cordovan leather and its portraits of the
+Archduke Albert and his bride, the Infanta Isabella, is scarcely
+changed since it was built soon after the death of Philip II. The
+Corps de Garde Espagnol and the Pavilion des Officiers Espagnols
+in the market-place, once the headquarters of the whiskered bravos
+who wrought such ills to Flanders, are now used by the Municipal
+Council of the town as a museum and a public library; but the stones
+of this little square were often trodden by the persecutors, with
+their guards and satellites, in the years when Peter Titelmann
+the Inquisitor stalked through the fields of Flanders, torturing
+and burning in the name of the Catholic Church and by authority
+of the Holy Office. The spacious room in which the tribunal of the
+Inquisition sat is nowadays remarkable only for its fine proportions
+and venerable appearance; but, though it was not erected until
+after the Spanish fury had spent its force, and at a time when
+wiser methods of government had been introduced, it reminds us of
+the days when the maxims of Torquemada were put in force amongst
+the Flemings by priests more wicked and merciless than any who
+could be found in Spain. And in the market-place the people must
+often have seen the dreadful procession by means of which the Church
+sought to strike terror into the souls of men. Those public orgies
+of clerical intolerance were the suitable consummation of the crimes
+which had been previously committed in the private conclave of
+the Inquisitors. The burning or strangling of a heretic was not
+accompanied by so much pomp and circumstance in small towns like
+Furnes as in the great centres, where multitudes, led by the highest
+in the land, were present to enjoy the spectacle; but the Inquisition
+of the Netherlands, under which Flanders groaned for so many years,
+was, as Philip himself once boasted, 'much more pitiless than that
+of Spain.'
+
+The groans of the victims will never more be heard in the
+torture-chamber, nor will crowds assemble in the market-place to
+watch the cortège of the _auto-da-fé_; but every year the famous
+Procession of Penitents, which takes place on the last Sunday of
+July, draws many strangers to Furnes.
+
+It is said in Bruges that the ghost of a Spanish soldier, condemned
+to expiate eternally a foul crime done at the bidding of the Holy
+Office, walks at midnight on the Quai Vert, like Hamlet's father
+on the terrace at Elsinore; and superstitious people might well
+fancy that a spectre appears in the market-place of Furnes on the
+summer's night when the town is preparing for the annual ceremony.
+The origin of the procession was this: In the year 1650 a soldier
+named Mannaert, only twenty-two years old, being in garrison at
+Furnes, went to Confession and Communion in the Chapel of the Capucins.
+After he had received the consecrated wafer, he was persuaded by one
+of his comrades, Mathurin Lejeusne, to take it out of his mouth,
+wrap it in a cloth, and, on returning to his lodging, fry it over
+a fire, under the delusion that by reducing it to powder he would
+make himself invulnerable. The young man was arrested, confessed his
+guilt, and himself asked for punishment. Condemned to be strangled,
+he heard the sentence without a murmur, and went to his death singing
+the penitential psalms. Soon afterwards Mathurin Lejeusne, the
+instigator of the sacrilege, was shot for some breach of military
+duty. This was regarded as a proof of Divine justice, and the citizens
+resolved that something must be done to appease the wrath of God,
+which they feared would fall upon their town because of the outrage
+done, as they believed, to the body of His Son. A society calling
+itself the 'Confrèrie de la Sodalité du Sauveur Crucifié et de
+la Sainte Mère Marie, se trouvant en douleur dessous la Croix,
+sur Mont Calvaire,' had been formed a few years before at Furnes,
+and the members now decided that a Procession of Penitents should
+walk through the streets every summer and represent to the people
+the story of the Passion.
+
+[Illustration: NIEUPORT. Interior of Church.]
+
+Though the procession at Furnes is a thing of yesterday compared to
+the Procession of the Holy Blood at Bruges, it is far more suggestive
+of mediævalism. The hooded faces of the penitents, the quaint wooden
+figures representing Biblical characters, the coarse dresses, the
+tawdry colours, the strangely weird arrangement of the whole business,
+take us back into the monkish superstitions of the Dark Ages, with
+their mystery plays. It is best seen from one of the windows of
+the Spanish House, or from the balcony of the Hôtel de Ville, on
+a sultry day, when the sky is heavy with black clouds, and thunder
+growls over the plain of Flanders, and hot raindrops fall now and
+then into the muddy streets. The first figure which appears is a
+veiled penitent bearing the standard of the Sodality. Then come,
+one after another, groups of persons representing various scenes
+in the Bible story, each group preceded by a penitent carrying
+an inscription to explain what follows. Abraham with his sword
+conducts Isaac to the sacrifice on Mount Moriah. A penitent holding
+the serpent and the cross walks before Moses. Two penitents wearily
+drag a car on which Joseph and Mary are seen seated in the stable
+at Bethlehem. The four shepherds and the three Magi follow. Then
+comes the flight into Egypt, with Mary on an ass led by Joseph,
+the infant Christ in her arms. Later we see the doctors of the
+Temple walking in two rows, disputing with the young Jesus in their
+midst. The triumphal entry into Jerusalem is represented by a crowd
+of schoolchildren waving palm-branches and singing hosannahs round
+Jesus mounted on an ass. The agony in the garden, Peter denying
+his Lord and weeping bitterly, Jesus crowned with thorns, Pilate
+in his judgment-hall, the Saviour staggering beneath the cross,
+the Crucifixion itself, the Resurrection and the Ascension, are
+all shown with the crude realism of the Middle Ages. There are
+penitents bearing ponderous crosses on their shoulders, or carrying
+in their hands the whips, the nails, the thorns, the veil of the
+Temple rent in twain, a picture of the darkened sun, and other
+symbols of the Passion. At the end, amidst torches and incense
+and solemn chanting, the Host is exhibited for the adoration of
+the crowd.
+
+[Illustration: FURNES. Tower of St. Nicholas.]
+
+Much of this spectacle is grotesque, and even ludicrous; but there
+is also a great deal that is terribly real, for the penitents are
+not actors playing a part, but are all persons who have come to
+Furnes for the purpose of doing penance. They are disguised by
+the dark brown robes which cover them from head to foot, so that
+they can see their way only through the eyeholes in the hoods which
+hide their faces; but as they pass silently along, bending under
+the heavy crosses, or holding out before them scrolls bearing such
+words as, 'All they that see Me laugh Me to scorn,' 'They pierced
+My hands and My feet,' or, 'See if there be any sorrow like unto
+My sorrow,' there are glimpses of delicate white hands grasping the
+hard wood of the crosses, and of small, shapely feet bare in the
+mud. What sighs, what tears and vain regrets, what secret tragedies
+of passion, guilt, remorse, may not be concealed amongst the doleful
+company who tread their own Via Dolorosa on that pilgrimage of
+sorrow through the streets of Furnes!
+
+[Illustration: FURNES. In St. Walburge's Church.]
+
+
+
+
+NIEUPORT--THE BATTLE OF THE DUNES
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IX
+
+NIEUPORT--THE BATTLE OF THE DUNES
+
+On the morning of July 2, in the year 1600, two armies--Spaniards,
+under the Archduke Albert, and Dutchmen, under Prince Maurice of
+Nassau--stood face to face amongst the dunes near Nieuport, where
+the river Yser falls into the sea about ten miles west from Ostend.
+
+In a field to the east of Nieuport there is a high, square tower,
+part of a monastery and church erected by the Templars in the middle
+of the twelfth century, which, though it escaped complete destruction,
+was set on fire and nearly consumed when the town was attacked and
+laid in ruins by the English and the burghers of Ghent in 1383,
+the year of their famous siege of Ypres. It is now in a half-ruinous
+condition, but in July, 1600, it was an important part of the
+fortifications, and from the top the watchmen of the Spanish garrison
+could see the country all round to a great distance beyond the
+broad moat which then surrounded the strong walls of Nieuport.
+A few miles inland, to the southwest, in the middle of the plain
+of Flanders, were the houses of Furnes, grouped round the church
+tower of St. Nicholas. To the north a wide belt of sandhills (the
+'dunes'), with the sea beyond them, extended far past Ostend on
+the east, and to the harbour of Dunkirk on the west. Nearer, on
+the landward side of the dunes to the east, and within less than a
+mile of each other, were the villages of Westende and Lombaerdzyde.
+Close at hand, all round Nieuport, there were numerous small lakes
+and watercourses connected with the channel of the Yser, which,
+flowing past the town, widened out until it joined the sea, and
+became a harbour, which on that morning was full of shipping.
+
+A new chapter had just begun in the history of West Flanders when
+the Dutchmen and the Spaniards thus met to slaughter each other
+amongst the sand and rushes of the dunes. Philip II. had offered to
+cede the Spanish Netherlands to his daughter, the Infanta Isabella,
+on condition that a marriage was arranged between her and the Archduke
+Albert of Austria. After the death of Philip II. this offer was
+confirmed by his successor, Philip III., and the wedding took place
+in April, 1599.
+
+[Illustration: NIEUPORT. A Fair Parishioner.]
+
+Albert and Isabella were both entering on the prime of life, the
+Archduke being forty and the Infanta thirty-two at the time of
+their marriage, and were both of a character admirably fitted for
+the lofty station to which they had been called. In their portraits,
+which hang, very often frayed and tarnished, on the walls of the
+Hôtel de Ville of many a Flemish town, there is nothing very royal
+or very attractive; but, even after making every allowance for the
+flattery of contemporary historians, there can be little doubt
+that their popularity was well deserved--well deserved if even a
+part of what has been said about them is true. The Archduke is
+always said to have taken Philip II. as a model of demeanour, but
+he had none of the worst faults of the sullen, powerful despot,
+with that small mind, that 'incredibly small' mind of his, and
+cold heart, cold alike to human suffering and human love, who had
+held the Flemings, whom he hated, for so many years in the hollow
+of his hand. His grave mien and reserved habits, probably acquired
+during his sojourn at the Court of Spain, were distasteful to the
+gay and pleasure-loving people of Flanders, who would have preferred
+a Prince more like Charles V., whose versatility enabled him to
+adapt himself to the customs of each amongst the various races over
+whom he ruled. Nevertheless, if they did not love him they respected
+him, and were grateful for the moderation and good feeling which
+distinguished his reign, and gave their distracted country, after
+thirty years of civil war, a period of comparative tranquillity.
+
+The Infanta Isabella, _débonnaire_, affable, tolerant, and
+noble-hearted, as she is described, gained the hearts of the Flemings
+as her husband never did. 'One could not find any Court more truly
+royal or more brilliant in its public fêtes, which sometimes recall
+the splendid epoch of the House of Burgundy. Isabella loves a country
+life. She is often to be seen on horseback, attending the tournaments,
+leading the chase, flying the hawk, taking part in the sports of
+the bourgeoise, shooting with the crossbow, and carrying off the
+prize.' Above all things, her works of charity endeared her to the
+people. In time of war she established hospitals for the wounded,
+for friends and enemies alike, where she visited them, nursed them,
+and dressed their wounds with her own hands, with heroic courage
+and tenderness.[*]
+
+[Footnote *: De Gerlache, i. 260.]
+
+[Illustration: NIEUPORT. Hall and Vicarage.]
+
+Even on their first coming into Flanders, before their characters
+were known except by hearsay, they were received with extraordinary
+enthusiasm. Travelling by way of Luxembourg, they came to Namur, where
+their first visit was made the occasion of a military fête, conducted
+under the personal supervision of Comte Florent de Berlaimont. At
+Nivelles the Duc d'Arschot paid out of his own purse the cost of
+the brilliant festivities to which the people of Brabant flocked
+in order to bid their new rulers welcome, and himself led the
+procession, accompanied by the Archbishop of Malines and the Bishop
+of Antwerp. So they journeyed on amidst scenes of public rejoicing
+until they came to Brussels, where they established their Court in
+accordance with the customs and ceremonies which had been usual
+under the Dukes of Burgundy and the Kings of Spain.
+
+But when the Archdukes, as they were called, passed from town to
+town on this Royal progress, the phantoms of war, pestilence, and
+famine hung over the land. The great cities of Flanders had been
+deserted by thousands of their inhabitants. The sea trade of the
+country had been destroyed by the vigorous blockade which the Dutch
+ships of war maintained along the coast. Religious intolerance
+had driven the most industrious of the working classes to find a
+refuge in Holland or England. Villages lay in ruins, surrounded
+by untilled fields and gardens run to seed. Silent looms and empty
+warehouses were seen on every side. To such a pass had the disastrous
+policy of the Escurial brought this fair province of the Spanish
+Empire! From all parts of Flanders the cry for peace went up, but
+the time for peace was not yet come.[*]
+
+[Footnote *: _L'Abbé Nameche_, xxi. 6-8.]
+
+The new reign had just begun when Maurice of Nassau suddenly invaded
+Flanders with a great force, and laid siege to Nieuport, the garrison
+of which, reinforced by an army, at the head of which the Archduke
+Albert had hurried across Flanders, was under the command of the
+Archduke himself, and many Spanish Generals of great experience
+in the wars.
+
+[Illustration: NIEUPORT. The Quay, with Eel-boats and Landing-stages.]
+
+Though the Court at Brussels had been taken by surprise, the Dutch
+army was in a position of great danger. Part of it lay on the west
+side of the Yser, and part to the east, amongst the dunes near
+Lombaerdzyde and Westende, with a bridge of boats thrown across
+the river as their only connection. Their ships were at anchor
+close to the shore; but Prince Maurice frankly told his men that
+it was useless to think of embarking in case of defeat, and that,
+therefore, they must either win the day or perish there, for the
+Spaniards were before them under the protection of Nieuport, the river
+divided them, the sea was behind them, and it would be impossible
+for a beaten army to escape by retreating through the dunes in the
+direction of Ostend.
+
+Such was the position of affairs beneath the walls of Nieuport
+at sunrise on July 2, 1600. The morning was spent by the Dutch
+in preparing for battle. Towards noon the Spanish leaders held
+a council of war, at which it was decided to attack the enemy as
+soon as possible, and about three o'clock the battle began. A stiff
+breeze from the west, blowing up the English Channel, drove clouds
+of sand into the eyes of the Spaniards, and the bright rays of the
+afternoon sun, shining in their faces as they advanced to the attack,
+dazzled and confused them. But, in spite of these disadvantages, it
+seemed at first as if the fortunes of the day were to go in their
+favour.
+
+The bridge of boats across the Yser was broken, and some of the
+Dutch regiments, seized by a sudden panic, began to retreat towards
+the sea; but, finding it impossible to reach the ships, they rallied,
+and began once more to fight with all the dogged courage of their
+race. For some hours the battle was continued with equal bravery
+on both sides, the Spaniards storming a battery which the Dutch
+had entrenched amongst the dunes, and the Dutch defending it so
+desperately that the dead and wounded lay piled in heaps around
+it. But at last the Spanish infantry were thrown into confusion
+by a charge of horsemen; the Archduke Albert was wounded, and had
+to retire from the front to have his injuries attended to. Prince
+Maurice ordered a general advance of all his army, and in a few
+minutes the enemy were fleeing from the battlefield, leaving behind
+them 3,000 dead, 800 prisoners, and more than 100 standards. The
+loss on the Dutch side was about 2,000.
+
+The Archduke Albert, who had narrowly escaped being himself taken
+prisoner, succeeded in entering Nieuport safely with what remained
+of his army. The town remained in the hands of the Spaniards, for
+Prince Maurice, after spending some days in vain attempts to capture
+it, marched with his whole force to Ostend, where soon afterwards
+began the celebrated siege, which was to last for three long years,
+and about which all Europe never tired of talking.[*]
+
+[Footnote *: 'Le siège d'Ostende fut, pendant ces trois ans, la
+fable et la nouvelle de l'Europe; on ne se lassait pas d'en parler.
+Des princes, des étrangers de toutes les nations venaient y
+assister.'--_L'Abbé Nameche_, xxi. 24.]
+
+[Illustration: NIEUPORT. The Town Hall.]
+
+The history of Nieuport since those days has been the history of
+a gradual fall. Its sea trade disappeared slowly but surely; the
+fishing industry languished; the population decreased year by year;
+and it has not shared to any appreciable extent in the prosperity
+which has enriched other parts of Flanders since the Revolution of
+1830. It is now a quiet, sleepy spot, with humble streets, which
+remind one of some fishing village on the east coast of Scotland.
+Men and women sit at the doors mending nets or preparing bait. The
+boats, with their black hulls and dark brown sails, move lazily
+up to the landing-stages, where a few small craft, trading along
+the coast, lie moored. Barges heavily laden with wood are pulled
+laboriously through the locks of the canals which connect the Yser
+with Ostend and Furnes. The ancient fortifications have long since
+disappeared, with the exception of a few grass-grown mounds; and
+only the grim tower of the Templars, standing by itself in a field
+on the outskirts of the town, remains to show that this insignificant
+place was once a mighty stronghold.
+
+In those old Flemish towns, however, it is always possible to find
+something picturesque; and here we have the Cloth Hall, with its
+low arches opening on the market-place, and the Gothic church,
+one of the largest in Flanders, with its porch and tower, where
+the bell-ringers play the chimes and the people pass devoutly to
+the services of the church. But that is all. Nieuport has few
+attractions nowadays, and is chiefly memorable in Flemish history
+because under its walls they fought that bloody 'Battle of the
+Dunes,' in which the stubborn strength and obstinacy of the Dutch
+overcame the fiery valour of the Spaniards.
+
+They are all well-nigh forgotten now, obstinate Dutchman and valiant
+Spaniard alike. Amongst the dunes not a vestige remains of the
+field-works for which they fought. Bones, broken weapons and shattered
+breastplates, and all the débris of the fight, were long ago buried
+fathoms deep beneath mounds of drifting sand. Old Nieuport--Nieuport
+Ville, as they call it now--for which so much blood was shed, is
+desolate and dreary with its small industries and meagre commerce;
+but a short walk to the north brings us to Nieuport-Bains, and to
+the gay summer life which pulsates all along the Flemish coast,
+from La Panne on the west to the frontiers of Holland.
+
+[Illustration: NIEUPORT. Church Port (Evensong).]
+
+
+
+
+THE COAST OF FLANDERS
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER X
+
+THE COAST OF FLANDERS
+
+To walk from Nieuport Ville to the Digue de Mer at Nieuport-Bains
+is to pass in a few minutes from the old Flanders, the home of
+so much romance, the scene of so many stirring deeds, from the
+market-places with the narrow gables heaped up in piles around
+them, from the belfries soaring to the sky, from the winding streets
+and the narrow lanes, in which the houses almost touch each other
+from the tumble-down old hostelries, from the solemn aisles where
+the candles glimmer and the dim red light glows before the altar,
+from the land of Bras-de-Fer, and Thierry d'Alsace, and Memlinc,
+and Van Eyck, and Rubens, the land which was at once the Temple
+and the Golgotha of Europe, into the clear, broad light of modern
+days.
+
+The Flemish coast, from the frontiers of France to the frontiers
+of Holland, is throughout the same in appearance. The sea rolls
+in and breaks upon the yellow beach, which extends from east to
+west for some seventy kilometres in an irregular line, unbroken
+by rocks or cliffs. Above the beach are the dunes, a long range
+of sandhills, tossed into all sorts of queer shapes by the wind,
+on which nothing grows but rushes or stunted Lombardy poplars,
+and which reach their highest point, the Hoogen-Blekker, about 100
+feet above the sea, near Coxyde, a fishing village four or five
+miles from Nieuport. Behind the dunes a strip of undulating ground
+('Ter Streep'), seldom more than a bare mile in width, covered with
+scanty vegetation, moss, and bushes, connects the barren sandhills
+with the cultivated farms, green fields, and woodlands of the Flemish
+plain. On the other side of the Channel the chalk cliffs and rocky
+coast of England have kept the waves in check; but the dunes were,
+for many long years, the only barrier against the encroachments
+of the sea on Flanders. They are, however, a very weak defence
+against the storms of autumn and winter. The sand drifts like snow
+before the wind, and the outlines of these miniature mountain ranges
+change often in a single night. At one time, centuries ago, this
+part of Flanders, which is now so bare, was, it is pretty clear,
+covered by forests, the remains of which are still sometimes found
+beneath the subsoil inland and under the sea. When the great change
+came is unknown, but the process was probably gradual. At an early
+period, here, as in Holland, the fight against the invasions of the
+sea began, and the first dykes are said to have been constructed
+in the tenth century. The first was known as the Evendyck, and
+ran from Heyst to Wenduyne. Others followed, but they were swept
+away, and now only a few traces of them are to be found, buried
+beneath the sand and moss.[*]
+
+[Footnote *: Bortier, _Le Littoral de la Flandre au IXe et au XIXe
+Siècles._]
+
+[Illustration: THE DUNES. A Stormy Evening.]
+
+The wild storms of the tenth, eleventh, and twelfth centuries changed
+the aspect of the coast of Flanders. Nieuport rose in consequence
+of one of these convulsions of Nature, when the inhabitants of
+Lombaerdzyde, which was then a seaport, were driven by the tempests
+to the inland village of Santhoven, the name of which they changed
+to 'Neoportus'--the new harbour. This was in the beginning of the
+twelfth century, and thenceforth the struggle against the waves
+went on incessantly. Lands were granted by Thierry d'Alsace on
+condition that the owner should construct dykes, and Baldwin of
+Constantinople appointed guardians of the shore, charged with the
+duty of watching the sea and constructing defensive works. But the
+struggle was carried on under the utmost difficulties. In the twelfth
+century the sea burst in with resistless force upon the low-lying
+ground, washing away the dunes and swallowing up whole towns. The
+inroads of the waves, the heavy rains, and the earthquakes, made
+life so unendurable that there were thousands who left their homes
+and emigrated to Germany.
+
+Later, in the thirteenth century, there was a catastrophe of appalling
+dimensions, long known as the 'Great Storm,' when 40,000 Flemish
+men and women perished. This was the same tempest which overran
+the Dutch coast, and formed the Zuyder Zee, those 1,400 square
+miles of water which the Dutch are about to reclaim and form again
+into dry land. In the following century the town of Scarphout, in
+West Flanders, was overwhelmed, and the inhabitants built a new
+town for themselves on higher ground, and called it Blankenberghe,
+which is now one of the most important watering-places on the coast.
+
+Ever since those days this constant warfare against the storms
+has continued, and the sea appears to be bridled; but anyone who
+has watched the North Sea at high tide on a stormy day beating
+on the shores of Flanders, and observed how the dunes yield to
+the pressure of the wind and waves, and crumble away before his
+eyes, must come to the conclusion that the peril of the ocean is
+not yet averted, and can understand the meaning of the great modern
+works, the _digues de mer_, or sea-fronts, as they would be called
+in England, which are being gradually constructed at such immense
+cost all along the coast.
+
+A most interesting and, indeed, wonderful thing in the recent history
+of the Netherlands is the rapid development of the Flemish littoral
+from a waste of sand, with here and there a paltry fishing hamlet
+and two or three small towns, into a great cosmopolitan pleasure
+resort. Seventy-five years ago, when Belgium became an independent
+country, and King Leopold I. ascended the throne, Ostend and Nieuport
+were the only towns upon the coast which were of any size; but
+Ostend was then a small fortified place, with a harbour wholly
+unsuited for modern commerce, and Nieuport, in a state of decadence,
+though it possessed a harbour, was a place of no importance. To-day
+the whole coast is studded with busy watering-places, about twenty
+of them, most of which have come into existence within the last
+fifteen years, with a resident population of about 60,000, which
+is raised by visitors in summer to, it is said, nearly 125,000. The
+dunes, which the old Counts of Flanders fought so hard to preserve
+from the waves, and which were at the beginning of the present
+century mere wastes of sand, a sort of 'no man's land,' of little
+or no use except for rabbit-shooting, are now valuable properties,
+the price of which is rising every year.
+
+The work of turning the sand into gold, for that is what the development
+of the Flemish coast comes to, has been carried out partly by the
+State and partly by private persons. In early times this belt of
+land upon the margin of the sea was held by the Counts of Flanders,
+who treated the ridge of sandhills above high-water mark as a natural
+rampart against the waves, and granted large tracts of the flat
+ground which lay behind to various religious houses. At the French
+Revolution these lands were sold as Church property at a very low
+figure, and were afterwards allowed, in many cases, to fall out of
+cultivation by the purchasers. So great a portion of the district
+was sold that at the present time only a small portion of the dune
+land is the property of the State--the narrow strip between Mariakerke
+and Middelkerke on the west of Ostend, and that which lies between
+Ostend and Blankenberghe on the east. The larger portions, which
+are possessed by private owners, are partly the property of the
+descendants of those who bought them at the Revolution, and partly
+of building societies, incorporated for the purpose of developing
+what Mr. Hall Caine once termed the 'Visiting Industry'--that is
+to say, the trade in tourists and seaside visitors.[*]
+
+[Footnote *: Letter to the Manx Reform League, November, 1903.]
+
+[Illustration: AN OLD FARMER]
+
+Plage de Westende, Le Coq, and Duinbergen--three charming summer
+resorts--have been created by building societies. Nieuport-Bains
+and La Panne have been developed by the owners of the adjoining
+lands, the families of Crombez and Calmeyn. Wenduyne, on the other
+hand, which lies between Le Coq and Blankenberghe, has been made
+by the State, while the management of Blankenberghe, Heyst, and
+Middelkerke, as bathing stations, is in the hands of their communal
+councils.
+
+On the coast of Flanders, Ostend--'La Reine des Plages'--is, it
+need hardly be said, the most important place, and its rise has
+been very remarkable. Less than fifty years ago the population was
+in all about 15,000. During the last fifteen years it has increased
+by nearly 15,000, and now amounts to about 40,000 in round numbers.
+The increase in the number of summer visitors has been equally
+remarkable. In the year 1860 the list of strangers contained 9,700
+names; three years ago it contained no less than 42,000. This floating
+population of foreign visitors who come to Ostend is cosmopolitan
+to an extent unknown at any watering-place in England. In 1902
+11,000 English, 8,000 French, 5,000 Germans, and 2,000 Americans
+helped to swell the crowds who walked on the sea-front, frequented
+the luxurious and expensive hotels, or left their money on the
+gaming-tables at the Kursaal. On one day--August 15, 1902--7,000
+persons bathed.[*]
+
+[Footnote *: I give these figures on the authority of M. Paul Otlet,
+Advocate, of Brussels, to whom I am indebted for much information
+regarding the development of the coast of Flanders. See also an
+article by M. Otlet in _Le Cottage_, May 15 to June 15, 1904.]
+
+Blankenberghe, with its 30,000 summer visitors, comes next in importance
+to Ostend, while both Heyst and Middelkerke are crowded during
+the season. But the life at these towns is not so agreeable as at
+the smaller watering-places. The hotels are too full, and have,
+as a rule, very little except their cheapness to recommend them.
+There is usually a body calling itself the _comité des fêtes_,
+the members of which devote themselves for two months every summer
+to devising amusements, sports, and competitions of various kinds,
+instead of leaving people to amuse themselves in their own way,
+so that hardly a day passes on which the strains of a second-rate
+band are not heard in the local Kursaal, or a night which is not
+made hideous by a barrel-organ, to which the crowd is dancing on
+the _digue_. At the smaller places, however, though these also
+have their _comité des fêtes_, one escapes to a great extent from
+these disagreeable surroundings.
+
+May, June, and September are the pleasantest months upon the coast
+of Flanders, for the visitors are not so numerous, and even in
+mid-winter the dunes are worth a visit. Then the hotels and villas
+fronting the sea are closed, and their windows boarded up. The
+bathing-machines are removed from the beach, and stand in rows in
+some sheltered spot. The _digue_, a broad extent of level brickwork,
+is deserted, and the wind sweeps along it, scattering foam and
+covering it with sand and sprays of tangled seaweed. The mossy
+surface of the dunes is frozen hard as iron, and often the hailstones
+rush in furious blasts before the wind. For league after league
+there is not a sign of life, except the sea-birds flying low near
+the shore, or the ships rising and falling in the waves far out
+to sea. In the winter months the coast of Flanders is bleak and
+stormy, but the air in these solitudes is as health-giving as in
+any other part of Europe.
+
+Of late years the Government, represented by Comte de Smet de Naeyer,
+has bestowed much attention on the development of the littoral,
+and King Leopold II. has applied his great business talents to
+the subject. Large sums of money have been voted by the Belgian
+Parliament for the construction of public works and the extension
+of the means of communication from place to place. There is a light
+railway, the 'Vicinal,' which runs along the whole coast, at a
+short distance from the shore, from Knocke, on the east, to La
+Panne in the extreme west, and which is connected with the system of
+State railways at various points. From Ostend, through Middelkerke,
+to Plage de Westende, an electric railway has been constructed,
+close to the beach and parallel to the Vicinal (which is about
+a mile inland), on which trains run every ten minutes during the
+summer season. As an instance of the speed and energy with which
+these works for the convenience of the public are carried out,
+when once they have been decided upon, it may be mentioned that the
+contract for the portion of the electric line between Middelkerke
+and Plage de Westende, a distance of about a mile and a half, was
+signed on May 9, that five days later 200 workmen began to cut
+through the dunes, embank and lay the permanent way, and that on
+June 25, in spite of several interruptions owing to drifting sand
+and heavy rains, the first train of the regular service arrived
+at Plage de Westende.
+
+[Illustration: LA PANNE. Interior of a Flemish Inn.]
+
+A large sum, amounting to several millions of francs, is voted
+every year for the protection of the shores of Flanders against
+the encroachments of the sea, by the construction of these solid
+embankments of brickwork and masonry, which will, in the course
+of a few years, extend in an unbroken line along the whole coast
+from end to end. The building of these massive sea-walls is a work
+of great labour and expense, for what seems to be an impregnable
+embankment, perhaps 30 feet high and 90 feet broad, solid and strong
+enough to resist the most violent breakers, will be undermined and
+fall to pieces in a few hours, if not made in the proper way. A
+_digue_, no matter how thick, which rests on the sand alone will
+not last. A thick bed of green branches bound together must first
+be laid down as a foundation: this is strengthened by posts driven
+through it into the sand. Heavy timbers, resting on bundles of
+branches lashed together, are wedged into the foundations, and
+slope inwards and upwards to within a few feet of the height to
+which it is intended to carry the _digue_. On the top another solid
+bed of branches is laid down, and the whole is first covered with
+concrete, and then with bricks or tiles, while the edge of the
+_digue_, at the top of the seaward slope, is composed of heavy blocks
+of stone cemented together and bound by iron rivets.
+
+_Digues_ made in this solid fashion, all of them higher above the
+shore than the Thames Embankment is above the river, and some of
+them broader than the Embankment, will, before very many years
+have passed, stretch along the whole coast of Flanders without
+a break, and will form not only a defence against the tides, but
+a huge level promenade, with the dunes on one side and the sea on
+the other. This is a gigantic undertaking, but it will be completed
+during the lifetime of the present generation.
+
+[Illustration: LA PANNE. A Flemish Inn--Playing Skittles.]
+
+Another grandiose idea, which is actually being carried into effect,
+is to connect all the seaside resorts on the coast of Flanders by
+a great boulevard, 40 yards wide, with a road for carriages and
+pedestrians, a track for motor-cars and bicycles, and an electric
+railway, all side by side. Large portions of this magnificent roadway,
+which is to be known as the 'Route Royale,' have already been completed
+between Blankenberghe and Ostend, and from Ostend to Plage de Westende.
+From Westende it will be continued to Nieuport-Bains, crossing the
+Yser by movable bridges, and thence to La Panne, and so onwards,
+winding through the dunes, over the French borders, and perhaps
+as far as Paris!
+
+A single day's journey through the district which this 'Route Royale'
+is to traverse will lead the traveller through the most interesting
+part of the dunes, and introduce him to most of the favourite _plages_
+on the coast of Flanders, and thus give him an insight into many
+characteristic Flemish scenes. La Panne, for instance, and Adinkerque,
+in the west and on the confines of France, are villages inhabited
+by fishermen who have built their dwellings in sheltered places
+amongst the dunes. The low white cottages of La Panne, with the
+strings of dried fish hanging on the walls, nestle in the little
+valley from which the place takes its name (for _panne_ in Flemish
+means 'a hollow'), surrounded by trees and hedges, gay with wild
+roses in the summer-time. Each cottage stands in its small plot
+of garden ground, and most of the families own fishing-boats of
+their own, and farm a holding which supplies them with potatoes
+and other vegetables.
+
+For a long time these cottages were the only houses at La Panne,
+which was seldom visited, except by a few artists; but about fifteen
+years ago the surveyors and the architects made their appearance,
+paths and roads were laid out, and, as if by magic, cottages and
+villas and the inevitable _digue de mer_ have sprung up on the
+dunes near the sea, and not very far from the original village. The
+chief feature of the new La Panne is that the houses are, except
+those on the sea-front, built on the natural levels of the ground,
+some perched on the tops of the dunes, and others in the hollows
+which separate them. The effect is extremely picturesque, and the
+example of the builders of La Panne is being followed at other places,
+notably at Duinbergen, one of the very latest bathing stations,
+which has risen during the last three years about a mile to the
+east of Heyst.
+
+Another very interesting place is the Plage de Westende, the present
+terminus of the electric railway from Ostend. The old village of
+Westende lies a mile inland on the highway between Nieuport and
+Ostend, close to the scene of the Battle of the Dunes. This Plage
+is, indeed, a model seaside resort, with a _digue_ which looks down
+upon a shore of the finest sand, and from which, of an evening,
+one sees the lights of Ostend in the east, and the revolving beacon
+at Dunkirk shining far away to the west. The houses which front
+the sea, all different from each other, are in singularly good
+taste; and behind them are a number of detached cottages and villas,
+large and small, in every variety of design. Ten years ago the
+site of this little town was a rabbit warren; now everything is
+up to date: electric light in every house, perfect drainage, a
+good water-supply, tennis courts, and an admirable hotel, where
+even the passing stranger feels at home. Though only three-quarters
+of an hour from noisy, crowded, bustling Ostend by the railway, it
+is one of the quietest and most comfortable places on the coast
+of Flanders, and can be reached by travellers from England in a
+few hours.
+
+Some years hence the lovely, peaceful Plage de Westende may have
+grown too big, but when the sand has all been turned into gold,
+and when the contractors and builders have grown rich, those who
+have known Westende in its earlier days will think of it as the
+quiet spot about which at one time only a few people used to stroll;
+where perhaps the poet Verhaeren found something to inspire him;
+where many a long summer's evening was spent in pleasant talk on
+history, and painting, and music by a little society of men and
+women who spoke French, or German, or English, as the fancy took
+them, and laughed, and quoted, and exchanged ideas on every subject
+under the sun; where the professor of music once argued, and sprang
+up to prove his point by playing--but that is an allusion, or, as
+Mr. Kipling would say, 'another story.'
+
+The district in which Westende lies, with Lombaerdzyde, Nieuport,
+Furnes, and Coxyde close together, is the most interesting on the
+coast of Flanders. Le Coq, on the other hand, is in that part of
+the dune country which has least historical interest, and is chiefly
+known as the place where the Royal Golf Club de Belgique has its
+course. It is only twenty minutes from Ostend on the Vicinal railway,
+which has a special station for golfers near the Club House. There
+is no _digue_, and the houses are dotted about in a valley behind
+the dunes. This place has a curious resemblance to a Swiss village.
+
+A few years ago the owners of lands upon the Flemish littoral began
+to grasp the fact that there was a sport called golf, on which
+Englishmen were in the habit of spending money, and that it would be
+an addition to the attractions of Ostend if, beside the racecourse,
+there was a golf-course. King Leopold, who is said to contemplate
+using all the land between the outskirts of Ostend and Le Coq for
+sporting purposes, paid a large sum, very many thousands of francs,
+out of his own pocket, and the golf-links at Le Coq were laid out.
+The Club House is handsome and commodious, but, unfortunately, the
+course itself, which is the main thing, is not very satisfactory,
+being far too artificial. The natural 'bunkers' were filled up,
+and replaced by ramparts and ditches like those on some inland
+courses in England. On the putting greens the natural undulations
+of the ground have been levelled, and the greens are all as flat
+and smooth as billiard-tables. There are clumps of ornamental wood,
+flower-beds, and artificial ponds with goldfish swimming in them. It
+is all very pretty, but it is hardly golf. What with the 'Grand Prix
+d'Ostende,' the 'Prix des Roses,' the 'Prix des Ombrelles, handicap
+libre, réservé aux Dames,' the 'Grand Prix des Dames,' and a number
+of other _objets d'art_, which are offered for competition on almost
+every day from the beginning of June to the end of September, this
+is a perfect paradise for the pot-hunter and his familiar friend
+Colonel Bogey. Real golf, the strenuous game, which demands patience
+and steady nerves, perhaps, more than any other outdoor game, is
+not yet quite understood by many Belgians; but the bag of clubs
+is every year becoming more common on the Dover mail-boats.
+
+Most of these golf-bags find their way to Knocke, where many of
+the English colony at Bruges spend the summer, and which, as the
+coast of Flanders becomes better known, is visited every year by
+increasing numbers of travellers from the other side of the Channel.
+Knocke is in itself one of the least attractive places on the Flemish
+littoral. The old village, a nondescript collection of houses, lies
+on the Vicinal railway about a mile from the sea, which is reached
+by a straight roadway, and where there is a _digue_, numerous hotels,
+pensions, and villas, all of which are filled to overflowing in the
+season. The air, indeed, is perfect, and there are fine views from
+the _digue_ and the dunes of the island of Walcheren, Flushing,
+and the estuary of the Scheldt; but the place was evidently begun
+with no definite plan: the dunes were ruthlessly levelled, and the
+result is a few unlovely streets, and a number of detached houses
+standing in disorder amidst surroundings from which everything
+that was picturesque has long since departed.
+
+But the dunes to the east are wide, and enclose a large space of
+undulating ground; and here the Bruges Golf and Sports Club has
+its links, which present a very complete contrast to the Belgian
+course at Le Coq. The links at Knocke, if somewhat rough and ready,
+are certainly sporting in the highest degree. Some of the holes,
+those in what is known as the Green Valley, are rather featureless;
+but in the other parts of the course there are numerous natural
+hazards, bunkers, and hillocks thick with sand and rushes. It has
+no pretentions to be a 'first-class' course (for one thing, it is
+too short), but in laying out the eighteen holes the ground has
+been utilized to the best advantage, and the Royal and Ancient
+game flourishes more at Knocke than at any other place in Belgium.
+The owners of the soil and the hotel-keepers, with a keen eye to
+business, and knowing that the golfing alone brings the English,
+from whom they reap a golden harvest, to Knocke, do all in their
+power to encourage the game, and it is quite possible that before
+long other links may be established along the coast. The soil of
+the strip behind the dunes is not so suitable for golf as the close
+turf of St. Andrews, North Berwick, or Prestwick, for in many places
+it consists of sand with a slight covering of moss; but with proper
+treatment it could probably be improved and hardened. It is merely
+a question of money, and money will certainly be forthcoming if
+the Government, the communes, and the private owners once see that
+this form of amusement will add to the popularity of the littoral.
+
+A short mile's walk to the west of Knocke brings us to Duinbergen,
+one of the newest of the Flemish _plages_, founded in the year
+1901 by the Société Anonyme de Duinbergen, a company in which some
+members of the Royal Family are said to hold shares. At Knocke
+and others of the older watering-places everything was sacrificed
+to the purpose of making money speedily out of every available
+square inch of sand, and the first thing done was to destroy the
+dunes. But at Duinbergen the good example set by the founders of
+La Panne has been followed and improved upon, and nothing could
+be more _chic_ than this charming little place, which was planned
+by Herr Stübben, of Cologne, an architect often employed by the
+King of the Belgians, whose idea was to create a small garden city
+among the dunes. The dunes have been carefully preserved; the roads
+and pathways wind round them; most of the villas and cottages have
+been erected in places from which a view of the sea can be obtained;
+and even the _digue_ has been built in a curve in order to avoid
+the straight line, which is apt to give an air of monotony to the
+rows of villas, however picturesque they may be in themselves,
+which face the sea at other places. So artistic is the appearance
+of the houses that the term 'Style Duinbergen' is used by architects
+to describe it. Electric lighting, a copious supply of water rising
+by gravitation to the highest houses, and a complete system of
+drainage, add to the luxuries and comforts of this _plage_, which
+is one of the best illustrations of the wonders which have been
+wrought among the dunes by that spirit of enterprise which has
+done so much for modern Flanders during the last few years.
+
+
+
+
+COXYDE--THE SCENERY OF THE DUNES
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XI
+
+COXYDE--THE SCENERY OF THE DUNES
+
+The whole of the coast-line is within the province of West Flanders,
+and its development in recent years is the most striking fact in
+the modern history of the part of Belgium with which this volume
+deals. The change which has taken place on the littoral during the
+last fifteen or twenty years is extraordinary, and the contrast
+between the old Flanders and the new, between the Flanders which
+lingers in the past and the Flanders which marches with the times,
+is brought vividly before us by the difference between such mediæval
+towns as Bruges, Furnes, or Nieuport, and the bright new places
+which glitter on the sandy shores of the Flemish coast. But in
+almost every corner of the dunes, close to these signs of modern
+progress, there is something to remind us of that past history
+which is, after all, the great charm of Flanders.
+
+One of the most characteristic spots in the land of the dunes is
+the village of Coxyde, which lies low amongst the sandhills, about
+five miles west from Nieuport, out of sight of the sea, but inhabited
+by a race of fisherfolk who, curiously enough, pursue their calling
+on horseback. Mounted on their little horses, and carrying baskets
+and nets fastened to long poles, they go into the sea to catch
+small fish and shrimps. It is strange to see them riding about
+in the water, sometimes in bands, but more frequently alone or in
+pairs; and this curious custom, which has been handed down from
+father to son for generations, is peculiar to the part of the coast
+which lies between La Panne and the borders of France.
+
+Near Coxyde, and at the corner where the road from Furnes turns
+in the direction of La Panne, is a piece of waste ground which
+travellers on the Vicinal railway pass without notice. But here
+once stood the famous Abbey of the Dunes.
+
+[Illustration: COXYDE. A Shrimper on Horseback.]
+
+In the first years of the twelfth century a pious hermit named
+Lyger took up his abode in these solitary regions, built a dwelling
+for himself, and settled down to spend his life in doing good works
+and in the practice of religion. Soon, as others gathered round
+him, his dwelling grew into a monastery, and at last, in the year
+1122, the Abbey of the Dunes was founded. It was nearly half a
+century before the great building, which is said to have been the
+first structure of such a size built of brick in Flanders, was
+completed; but when at last the work was done the Abbey was, by all
+accounts, one of the most magnificent religious houses in Flanders,
+consisting of a group of buildings with no less than 105 windows,
+a rich and splendid church, so famous for its ornamental woodwork
+that the carvings of the stalls were reproduced in the distant
+Abbey of Melrose in Scotland, and a library which, as time went
+on, became a storehouse of precious manuscripts and hundreds of
+those wonderfully illustrated missals on which the monks of the
+Middle Ages spent so many laborious hours. We can imagine them
+in the cells of Coxyde copying and copying for hours together,
+or bending over the exquisitely coloured drawings which are still
+preserved in the museums of Flanders.
+
+But their most useful work was done on the lands which lay round
+the Abbey. There were at Coxyde in the thirteenth century no fewer
+than 150 monks and 248 converts engaged at one time in cultivating
+the soil.[*] They drained the marshes, and planted seeds where
+seeds would grow, until, after years of hard labour on the barren
+ground, the Abbey of the Dunes was surrounded by wide fields which
+had been reclaimed and turned into a fertile oasis in the midst
+of that savage and inhospitable desert.
+
+[Footnote *: Derode, _Histoire Religieuse de la Flandre Maritime_,
+p.86.]
+
+When St. Bernard was preaching the Crusade in Flanders he came to
+Coxyde. On his advice the monks adopted the Order of the Cistercians,
+and their first abbot under the new rule afterwards sat in the
+chair of St. Bernard himself as Abbot of Clairvaux. Thereafter
+the Cistercian Abbey of the Dunes grew in fame, especially under
+the rule of St. Idesbaldus, who had come there from Furnes, where
+he had been a Canon of the Church of Ste. Walburge. 'It has also a
+special interest for English folk. It long held lands in the isle
+of Sheppey, as well as the advowson of the church of Eastchurch,
+in the same island. These were bestowed on it by Richard the
+Lion-Hearted. The legend says that these gifts were made to reward
+its sixth abbot, Elias, for the help he gave in releasing Richard
+from captivity. Anyhow, Royal charters, and dues from the Archbishop
+of Canterbury, and a Bull of Pope Celestine III., confirmed the
+Abbey in its English possessions and privileges. The Abbey seems
+to have derived little benefit from these, and finally, by decision
+of a general congregation of the Cistercian Order, handed them over
+to the Abbot and Chapter of Bexley, to recoup the latter for the
+cost of entertaining monks of the Order going abroad, or returning
+from the Continent, on business of the Order.'[*]
+
+[Footnote *: Robinson, _Bruges, an Historical Sketch_, p. 176.]
+
+[Illustration: COXYDE. A Shrimper.]
+
+The English invasion of the fifteenth century destroyed the work
+of the monks in their fields and gardens, but the Abbey itself
+was spared; and the great disaster did not come until a century
+later, when the image-breakers, who had begun their work amongst the
+Gothic arches of Antwerp, spread over West Flanders, and descended
+upon Coxyde. The Abbey was attacked, and the monks fled to Bruges,
+carrying with them many of their treasures, which are still to
+be seen in the collection on the Quai de la Poterie, beyond the
+bridge which is called the Pont des Dunes. The noble building,
+so long the home of so much piety and learning, and from which so
+many generations of apostles had gone forth to toil in the fields
+and minister to the poor, was abandoned, and allowed to fall into
+ruins, until at last it gradually sunk into complete decay, and was
+buried beneath the sands. Not a trace of it now remains. History
+has few more piteous sermons to preach on the vanity of all the
+works of men.
+
+The fishermen on the coast of Flanders have, from remote times,
+paid their vows in the hour of danger to Notre Dame de Lombaerdzyde.
+If they escape from some wild storm they go on a pilgrimage of
+thanksgiving. They walk in perfect silence along the road to the
+shrine, for not a word must be spoken till they reach it; and these
+hardy seafaring men may be seen kneeling at the altar of the old,
+weather-beaten church which stands on the south side of the highway
+through the village, and in which are wooden models of ships hung
+up as votive offerings before an image of the Virgin, which is
+the object of peculiar veneration. The Madonna of Lombaerdzyde
+did not prevail to keep the sea from invading the village at the
+time when the inhabitants were driven to Nieuport, but the belief
+in her miraculous power is as strong to-day as it was in the Dark
+Ages.
+
+[Illustration: ADINKERQUE. Village and Canal.]
+
+There is a view of Lombaerdzyde which no one strolling on the dunes
+near Nieuport should fail to see--a perfect picture, as typical
+of the scenery in these parts as any landscape chosen by Hobbema
+or Ruysdael. A causeway running straight between two lofty dunes
+of bare sand, and bordered by stunted trees, forms a long vista at
+the end of which Lombaerdzyde appears--a group of red-roofed houses,
+with narrow gables and white walls, and in the middle the pointed
+spire of the church, beyond which the level plain of Flanders,
+dotted with other villages and churches and trees in formal rows,
+stretches away into the distance until it merges in the horizon.
+Adinkerque, a picturesque village beyond Furnes, is another place
+which calls to mind many a picture of the Flemish artists in the
+Musée of Antwerp and the Mauritshuis at The Hague; and the recesses
+of the dune country in which these places are hidden has a wonderful
+fascination about it--the irregular outlines of the dunes, some
+high and some low, sinking here into deep hollows of firm sand,
+and rising there into strange fantastic shapes, sometimes with
+sides like small precipices on which nothing can grow, and sometimes
+sloping gently downwards and covered with trembling poplars, spread
+in confusion on every side. Often near the shore the sandy barrier
+has been broken down by the wind or by the waves, and a long gulley
+formed, which cuts deep into the dunes, and through which the sand
+drifts inland till it reaches a steep bank clothed with rushes,
+against which it heaps itself, and so, rising higher with the storms
+of each winter, forms another dune. This process has been going
+on for ages. The sands are for ever shifting, but moss begins to
+grow in sheltered spots; such wild flowers as can flourish there
+bloom and decay; the poplars shed their leaves, and nourish by
+imperceptible degrees the fibres of the moss; some hardy grasses
+take root; and at length a scanty greensward appears. By such means
+slowly, in the microcosm of the dunes, have been evolved out of
+the changing sands places fit for men to live in, until now along
+the strip which guards the coast of Flanders there are green glades
+gay with flowers, and shady dells, and gardens sheltered from the
+wind, plots of pasture-land, cottages and churches which seem to
+grow out of the landscape, their colouring so harmonizes with the
+colouring which surrounds them. And ever, close at hand, the sea is
+rolling in and falling on the shore. 'Come unto these yellow sands,'
+and when the sun is going down, casting a long bar of burnished
+gold across the water, against which, perhaps, the sail of some
+boat looms dark for a moment and then passes on, the sky glows
+in such a lovely, tender light that those who watch it must needs
+linger till the twilight is fading away before they turn their faces
+inland. There are few evenings for beauty like a summer evening
+on the shores of Flanders.
+
+
+
+
+INDEX
+
+Abbey of the Dunes; of Melrose
+Adinkerque
+'Adoration of the Immaculate Lamb'
+Albert, Archduke, portrait at Furnes; at the Battle of the Dunes,
+ marries the Infanta Isabella; character of; wounded
+Albert, Prince, at Bruges
+Ancona, Bishop of
+André, St., village of
+Âne Aveugle, Rue de l'
+Angelo, Michael
+Anglaises, Couvent des Dames
+Antwerp, Cathedral of
+Arschot, Duc d'
+Artevelde, Jacques van
+Artevelde, Philip van
+Artois, Comte d'
+Augustinian Nuns
+
+Baldwin, Bras-de-Fer, real founder of Bruges; defends Flanders;
+ marries Judith; builds Church of St. Donatian
+Baldwin, King of Jerusalem
+Baldwin of Constantinople
+Baldwin VII.
+Bannockburn
+Bardi, money-changers at Bruges
+Bassin de Commerce at Bruges
+Battle of the Dunes _et seq._
+Battle of the Golden Spurs _et seq._
+Béguinage at Bruges; grove of
+Béhuchet, Nicholas
+Belfry of Bruges
+Belgian Parliament passes law for harbour near Heyst
+Berlaimont, Comte Florent de
+Bernard, St., of Clairvaux
+Bertulf, Provost of St. Donatian
+Bexley
+Bicycles, import duty on 'Bird of Honour'
+Blankenberghe, new harbour near; English fleet at, in 1340
+Boniface VIII.
+Bouchoute, Hôtel de
+Borthwick, Colonel
+Boterbeke
+Bourg, Place du, at Bruges
+Brangwyn, William
+Breidel, John
+Breskens
+Bristol, Earl of, at Bruges
+Bruges, described by John of Ypres; origin of name; primitive
+ township of; boundaries in early times; Market-Place; Halles; early
+ trade; the Loove at; growth of; capital of West Flanders; Baldwin
+ Bras-de-Fer its real founder; Place du Bourg; murder of Charles the
+ Good; Joanna of Navarre at; death of Marie, wife of Maximilian; Hôtel
+ de Ville; Customs House; Oriental appearance in Middle Ages; produce
+ sent to, in Middle Ages; Hanseatic League at; Consulates at;
+ splendour of, in Middle Ages; under the House of Burgundy; loss of
+ trade; pauperism; Charles II. at _et seq._; list of Charles II.'s
+ household at; death of Catherine of Braganza at; fate of Church at
+ French Revolution; Napoleon at; state of, since Revolution of 1830;
+ English Jesuits at; Queen Victoria at; relic of Holy Blood at
+ _et seq._; Procession of the Holy Blood _et seq._; relic of the
+ Holy Cross
+Bruges Matins
+Brussels, Charles II. at; Church of Ste. Gudule; Hôtel de Ville
+Burchard
+Burgundy, Charles, Duke of
+Burgundy, House of
+Burnet, Bishop
+Butler, Mr. J.
+
+Caine, Mr. Hall
+'Cairless,' Mr.
+Capucins, Chapel of, at Furnes
+Casa Negra
+Cathedral of Antwerp
+Cathedral of St. Martin at Ypres
+Cathedral of St. Sauveur at Bruges
+Catherine of Braganza
+Celestine III.
+Chapel of the Capucins at Furnes
+Chapelle du Saint-Sang (St. Basil's) at Bruges
+Charlemagne
+Charles II. of England at Bruges _et seq._
+Charles the Bald
+Charles the Bold
+Charles the Good
+Charles V.
+Charles VI.
+Châtillon, Jacques de
+Chemins-de-fer Vicinaux
+Church of Jerusalem at Bruges
+Church of Notre Dame at Bruges
+Church of St. Donatian at Bruges
+Church of Ste. Walburge
+Cistercians
+Clairvaux
+Clauwerts
+Clement V.
+Clement VII.
+Cologne
+Comte de la Hanse
+Congress of Vienna
+Coninck, Peter de
+Consulate of France; of Spain; of Smyrna
+Coolkerke
+Courtrai
+Couvent des Dames Anglaises
+Coxyde
+Cranenberg
+Crecy, Battle of
+Cromwell
+Customs House at Bruges
+
+Dalgetty, Dugald
+Damme _et seq._; population of; Röles de; harbour blocked up
+Dampierre, Guy de
+David, Gerard
+Deprysenaere, Jean of Ypres
+_Digues de mer_, construction of
+Donatian, Church of St., built by Baldwin Bras-de-Fer; Bertulf,
+ Provost of; site of; murder of Charles the Good in; destroyed
+Don John of Austria
+Dordrecht
+Duinbergen
+Dunes, Battle of the; scenery of _et seq._
+Dyver, the, at Bruges
+
+Edward III.
+Edward IV.
+Egmont, Count
+Elias, sixth Abbot of Coxyde
+English Merchant Adventurers
+Erembalds _et seq._; feud with Straetens; destruction of Ethelbald
+Ethelwulf, husband of Judith, daughter of Charles the Bald Evendyck
+Eyck, van, elder and younger
+
+Flanders, state of, in early times; invaded by Normans; origin of title
+ 'Count of'; defended by Baldwin Bras-de-Fer; allied to England;
+ neutrality of, in 1340 and 1830; invaded by French; plain of _et seq._;
+ ignorance of country people in; smuggling between France and; annexed
+ to France; invaded by English; causes of disunion in; ceded to the
+ Infanta Isabella; contrast between different parts of; coast of _et seq._
+Flotte, Pierre, Chancellor of France
+Flushing
+Fox, Sir Stephen
+France, Flanders annexed to
+France, Palais du
+French Consulate at Bruges
+Furnes; procession of penitents at; Church of Ste. Walburge; Hôtel de
+ Ville and Palais de Justice; Church of St. Nicholas; Corps de Garde
+ Espagnol and Pavillon des Officiers Espagnols
+
+Gand, Porte de
+Gardiner, Dr., quoted
+Gauthier de Sapignies
+Genoese merchants, house of, at Bruges
+George III.
+Germany, emigrations from Flanders to Ghent
+Ghiselhuis
+Gilliat-Smith, author of _The Story of Bruges_
+Gloucester, Henry, Duke of _et seq._
+Godshuisen
+Golden Fleece, Order of the
+Golden Spurs, Battle of the
+Golf in Belgium
+'Governor of the English Colony beyond the Seas'
+Grande Dame of Béguinage
+Grande Salle des Echevins at Bruges
+Great storm of thirteenth century
+Gruthuise
+Guildhouse of St. Sebastian at Bruges
+Gustavus Adolphus
+Guy de Dampierre
+
+Haecke, Canon van
+Halle de Drapiers at Ypres
+Halle de Paris at Bruges
+Halles at Bruges
+Hamilton, Sir James
+Hanseatic League
+Het Paradijs
+Heyst
+Hobbema
+Hogarth
+Holland, Béguinages in
+Holy Blood, relic and chapel of, at Bruges; Procession of the
+Holy Cross, relic of
+Holy Sepulchre, Church of, at Jerusalem
+Hoogenblekker
+Horn, Count
+Hôtel de Bouchoute at Bruges
+Hôtel de Ville at Bruges; at Furnes
+House of the Seven Towers
+Hyde (Lord Clarendon)
+
+Idesbaldus, St.
+Inquisition in Flanders
+Isabella, the Infanta
+
+Jerusalem, Baldwin, King of
+Jerusalem, Church of, at Bruges
+Jesse, _Memoirs of the Court of England_
+Jesuits at Bruges
+Joanna of Navarre
+John of Ypres
+Joseph II.
+Joseph of Arimathæa
+Judith, wife of Baldwin Bras-de-Fer
+Justice, Palais du, at Bruges; at Furnes
+
+Kadzand
+Kermesse
+King, Thomas Harper
+Knights of the Golden Fleece
+Knocke
+
+Lac d'Amour
+La Panne
+Le Coq
+_Legend of Montrose_
+Lejeusne, Mathurin
+Leliarts
+Leonius
+Leopold I.
+Leopold II.
+Lilly the astrologer
+Lincoln, Bishop of
+Lombaerdzyde
+Longfellow, quoted
+Loove, the, at Bruges
+Louis of Maele
+Louis of Nevers
+Louis XIV.
+Louvain
+Luxembourg
+Lyger
+
+Maele, Louis of
+Maison des Orientaux
+Mannaert
+Marbriers, Quai des
+Mariakerke
+Maria Theresa
+Market-Place of Bruges
+Mary, 'The Gentle'
+Matins of Bruges
+Maurice of Nassau
+Mauritshuis at The Hague
+Maximilian, Archduke
+Mazarin
+Melrose Abbey
+Memlinc
+Meuninxhove, John van
+Michael Angelo
+Middelkerke
+Minnewater
+Miracles wrought by the Holy Blood at Bruges
+Morgarten
+Mother Superior of Béguinage
+Murray, Sir Robert
+
+Napoleon at Bruges; return from Elba; canal to Sluis
+ constructed by
+Navarre, Joanna of
+Neutrality of Flanders in 1340 and 1830
+Nevers, Louis of
+Nicholas I., Pope
+Nicholas, Sir Edward
+Nieuport; origin of; besieged by Prince Maurice; fallen state of
+Nieuport-Bains
+'Nieuwerck,' at Ypres
+Nimeguen, Treaty of
+Nivelles
+Noé, Michael
+Normans in Flanders
+Norwich, Earl of
+Notre Dame, Church of, at Bruges
+Notre Dame de Lombaerdzyde
+Notre Dame de Thuine
+
+'Old England' at Bruges
+Oosterlingen Plaats
+Oostkerke
+Orientaux, Maison des; Place des
+Ormonde
+Osburga
+Ostend, growth of
+Otlet, M. Paul _note_
+Ouden Burg
+
+Palais de Justice, at Bruges; at Furnes
+Palais du Franc
+Paradijs, Het
+Parijssche Halle
+Paris
+Parma, Duke of, in Flanders
+Pauperism of Bruges
+Philip II. cedes Spanish Netherlands to his daughter
+Philip III.
+Philip of Valois
+Philip the Fair
+Place des Orientaux
+Place du Bourg
+Pont des Dunes
+Pope Clement V.; VII.; Boniface VIII.; Celestine III.; Urban VI.
+Poperinghe
+Porte de Damme
+Porte de Gand
+Porte Ste. Croix
+Procession of the Holy Blood at Bruges _et seq._; of Penitents at Furnes
+Pruyssenaere, Peter
+
+Quai Espagnol; Long; des Marbriers; du Miroir; de la Potterie; du Rosaire;
+ Spinola; Vert
+
+Rastadt, Treaty of
+Richard I.
+Robinson, Mr. Wilfrid, author of _Bruges, an Historical Sketch_
+Rochester, Earl of
+Rodenbach
+Röles de Damme
+Rome, flight of Baldwin and Judith to
+Roosebeke, Battle of
+Rosaire, Quai du
+Roulers
+Route Royale
+Roya
+Rue Anglaise, in Bruges; de l'Âne Aveugle; des Carmes; Cour de Gand;
+ Espagnole; Flamande; Haute; Neuve; du Vieux Bourg Ruysdael
+
+Santhoven
+Scarphout
+'Schielt ende Vriendt'
+Schomberg
+Schoutteeten
+'Scotland,' at Bruges
+Scottish merchants at Bruges
+Scott, Sir Walter
+See-Brugge
+Senlis
+Sheppey, Isle of
+Sluis
+Smith, Gilliat-
+Smet de Naeyer, Comte
+Smyrna, Consulate of, at Bruges
+Spaniards, at Bruges; at Furnes
+Spanish Inquisition
+Spencer, Henry, Bishop of Norwich
+St. André, Village of
+St. Basil, Church of
+St. Bavon
+St. Bernard of Clairvaux
+St. Donatian, Church of
+St. George, Society of
+St. Idesbaldus
+St. John, Hospital of
+St. Martin, Church of, at Furnes
+St. Nicholas, Church of, at Furnes
+St. Omer, Jesuits of
+St. Peter's, at Ghent
+St. Sauveur, Church of
+St. Sebastian, Society of, at Bruges; at Ypres
+Ste. Elizabeth, Church of
+Ste. Gudule, Church of
+Ste. Monica, Church of
+Ste. Walburge, Church of, at Bruges; at Furnes
+Straetens
+Stübben, Herr
+Swift, Dean
+Sybilla, wife of Thierry d'Alsace
+Sydenham, Colonel
+Syria
+
+Tarah, Viscount
+'Ter Streep'
+Thierry d'Alsace _et seq._
+'Thuindag'
+Thurloe State papers
+Titelman the Inquisitor
+Torquemada
+Tournai
+'Tower of London' at Bruges
+Turner, Sir James
+
+Valois, Philip of
+Van Eyck
+Vauban, fortifies Ypres
+Verhaeren, M., Belgian poet
+Vienna, Congress of
+Vieux Bourg, Rue du
+Virgin and Child, Statue of, at Bruges
+
+Urban VI.
+
+Victoria, Queen, at Bruges
+
+Walburge, Ste., Church of, at Bruges; at Furnes
+Walcheren
+Waterloo, Battle of
+Weavers, Guild of
+Wenduyne
+Westcapelle
+Westende, village; Plage
+William, Bishop of Ancona
+
+York, Duke of, at Bruges _et seq._
+Ypres; field preaching near; churches sacked; taken by Parma; by the
+ Protestants; Place du Musée; besieged by Louis XIV.; fortified by
+ Vauban; ceded to France; described by Vauban in 1689; taken by the
+ French in 1794; during the Hundred Days; end of military history;
+ Grand Place and Cloth Hall; monopoly of weaving linen; manages with
+ Bruges the Hanseatic League in Flanders; the Nieuwerck; riots at;
+ siege of, by English _et seq._; John of Ypres describes early Bruges
+Yser
+
+Zwijn
+Zuyder Zee
+
+
+
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+<h1>The Project Gutenberg eBook, Bruges and West Flanders, by George W. T.
+Omond, Illustrated by Amédée Forestier</h1>
+<pre>
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at <a href = "http://www.gutenberg.org">www.gutenberg.org</a></pre>
+<p>Title: Bruges and West Flanders</p>
+<p>Author: George W. T. Omond</p>
+<p>Release Date: June 23, 2006 [eBook #18670]</p>
+<p>Language: English</p>
+<p>Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1</p>
+<p>***START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK BRUGES AND WEST FLANDERS***</p>
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+<h3>E-text prepared by Robert J. Hall</h3>
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+<hr class="full">
+<p>&nbsp;<a name="ill1"></a></p>
+
+<table class="center" style="width: 356px;">
+<tr><td>
+ <img src="images/fig001.jpg" width="538" height="767"
+ alt="Fig. 1">
+</td></tr>
+<tr><td>A FLEMISH COUNTRY GIRL</td></tr>
+</table>
+
+<h1><a name="page_iii"><span class="page">Page iii</span></a>
+BRUGES AND WEST FLANDERS</h1>
+
+<p class="author">PAINTED BY AM&Eacute;D&Eacute;E FORESTIER</p>
+
+<p class="author">DESCRIBED BY G. W. T. OMOND</p>
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+<h3>1906</h3>
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+
+<h2><a name="page_v"><span class="page">Page v</span></a>
+Preface</h2>
+
+<p class="indent">
+There is no part of Europe more wanting in what is known as 'scenery'
+than Flanders; and those who journey there must spend most of their
+time in the old towns which are still so strangely medi&aelig;val
+in their aspect, or in country places which are worth seeing only
+because of their connection with some event in history&mdash;Nature
+has done so little for them. Thus the interest and the attraction
+of Flanders and the Flemish towns are chiefly historical. But it
+would be impossible to compress the history of such places as Bruges,
+Ypres, Furnes, or Nieuport within the limits of a few pages, except
+at the cost of loading them with a mass of dry facts. Accordingly
+the plan adopted in preparing the letterpress which accompanies Mr.
+Forestier's drawings has been to select a few leading incidents,
+and give these at some length.
+</p>
+
+<p class="indent">
+The Flemish School of Painting and Architecture <a name="page_vi"><span
+class="page">Page vi</span></a> has been so well and frequently
+described that it would have been mere affectation to make more
+than a few passing allusions to that topic.
+</p>
+
+<p class="indent">
+Some space has, however, been devoted to an account of the recent
+development of the Flemish littoral, which has been so remarkable
+during the last quarter of a century.
+</p>
+
+<h2><a name="page_vii"><span class="page">Page vii</span></a>
+Contents</h2>
+
+<p><a href="#page_3">CHAPTER I</a></p>
+
+<p class="contents">
+THE MARKET-PLACE AND BELFRY&mdash;EARLY HISTORY OF BRUGES</p>
+
+<p><a href="#page_13">CHAPTER II</a></p>
+
+<p class="contents">
+BALDWIN BRAS-DE-FER&mdash;THE PLACE DU BOURG&mdash;MURDER OF CHARLES
+THE GOOD</p>
+
+<p><a href="#page_27">CHAPTER III</a></p>
+
+<p class="contents">
+THE B&Eacute;GUINAGE&mdash;CHURCHES&mdash;THE RELIC OF THE HOLY
+BLOOD</p>
+
+<p><a href="#page_45">CHAPTER IV</a></p>
+
+<p class="contents">
+THE BRUGES MATINS&mdash;BATTLE OF THE GOLDEN SPURS</p>
+
+<p><a href="#page_57">CHAPTER V</a></p>
+
+<p class="contents">
+DAMME&mdash;THE SEA-FIGHT AT SLUIS&mdash;SPLENDOUR OF BRUGES IN
+THE MIDDLE AGES&mdash;THE FALL AND LOSS OF TRADE</p>
+
+<p><a href="#page_73">CHAPTER VI</a></p>
+
+<p class="contents">
+'BRUGES LA MORTE'</p>
+
+<p><a name="page_viii"><span class="page">Page viii</span></a>
+<a href="#page_95">CHAPTER VII</a></p>
+
+<p class="contents">
+THE PLAIN OF WEST FLANDERS&mdash;YPRES</p>
+
+<p><a href="#page_123">CHAPTER VIII</a></p>
+
+<p class="contents">
+FURNES&mdash;THE PROCESSION OF PENITENTS</p>
+
+<p><a href="#page_135">CHAPTER IX</a></p>
+
+<p class="contents">
+NIEUPORT&mdash;THE BATTLE OF THE DUNES</p>
+
+<p><a href="#page_147">CHAPTER X</a></p>
+
+<p class="contents">
+THE COAST OF FLANDERS</p>
+
+<p><a href="#page_171">CHAPTER XI</a></p>
+
+<p class="contents">
+COXYDE&mdash;THE SCENERY OF THE DUNES</p>
+
+<p><a href="#page_181">INDEX</a></p>
+
+<h2><a name="page_ix"><span class="page">Page ix</span></a>
+List of Illustrations</h2>
+
+<div class="center">
+<table>
+ <tr><td valign="top" align="right">1.&nbsp;<td align="left"><a href="#ill1">A Flemish Country Girl</a></td></tr>
+ <tr><td valign="top" align="right">2.&nbsp;<td align="left"><a href="#ill2">Bruges: A Corner of the Market on the Grand' Place</a></td></tr>
+ <tr><td valign="top" align="right">3.&nbsp;<td align="left"><a href="#ill3">Bell-ringer Playing a Chime</a></td></tr>
+ <tr><td valign="top" align="right">4.&nbsp;<td align="left"><a href="#ill4">Bruges: Porte d'Ostende</a></td></tr>
+ <tr><td valign="top" align="right">5.&nbsp;<td align="left"><a href="#ill5">Bruges: Rue de l'&Acirc;ne Aveugle (showing end of Town
+ Hall<br>and Bridge connecting it with Palais de Justice)</a></td></tr>
+ <tr><td valign="top" align="right">6.&nbsp;<td align="left"><a href="#ill6">Bruges: Quai du Rosaire</a></td></tr>
+ <tr><td valign="top" align="right">7.&nbsp;<td align="left"><a href="#ill7">Bruges: The B&eacute;guinage</a></td></tr>
+ <tr><td valign="top" align="right">8.&nbsp;<td align="left"><a href="#ill8">Bruges: Quai des Marbriers</a></td></tr>
+ <tr><td valign="top" align="right">9.&nbsp;<td align="left"><a href="#ill9">A Flemish Young Woman</a></td></tr>
+ <tr><td valign="top" align="right">10.&nbsp;<td align="left"><a href="#ill10">A Flemish Burgher</a></td></tr>
+ <tr><td valign="top" align="right">11.&nbsp;<td align="left"><a href="#ill11">Bruges: Quai du Miroir</a></td></tr>
+ <tr><td valign="top" align="right">12.&nbsp;<td align="left"><a href="#ill12">Bruges: View of the Palais du Franc.</a></td></tr>
+ <tr><td valign="top" align="right">13.&nbsp;<td align="left"><a href="#ill13">Bruges: Maison du P&eacute;lican (Almshouse)</a></td></tr>
+ <tr><td valign="top" align="right">14.&nbsp;<td align="left"><a href="#ill14">Bruges: Vegetable Market</a></td></tr>
+ <tr><td valign="top" align="right">15.&nbsp;<td align="left"><a href="#ill15">The Flemish Plain</a></td></tr>
+ <tr><td valign="top" align="right">16.&nbsp;<td align="left"><a href="#ill16">Duinhoek: Interior of a Farmhouse</a></td></tr>
+ <tr><td valign="top" align="right">17.&nbsp;<td align="left"><a href="#ill17">Adinkerque: At the Kermesse</a></td></tr>
+ <tr><td valign="top" align="right">18.&nbsp;<td align="left"><a href="#ill18">A Farmsteading</a></td></tr>
+ <tr><td valign="top" align="right">19.&nbsp;<td align="left"><a href="#ill19">Ypres: Place du Mus&eacute;e (showing Top Part of the Belfry)</a></td></tr>
+ <tr><td valign="top" align="right">20.&nbsp;<td align="left"><a href="#ill20">Ypres: Arcade under the Nieuwerk</a></td></tr>
+ <tr><td valign="top" align="right">21.&nbsp;<td align="left"><a href="#ill21">Furnes: Grand' Place and Belfry</a></td></tr>
+ <tr><td valign="top" align="right">22.&nbsp;<td align="left"><a href="#ill22">Furnes: Peristyle of Town Hall and Palais de Justice</a></td></tr>
+ <tr><td valign="top" align="right">24.&nbsp;<td align="left"><a href="#ill24">Furnes: Tower of St. Nicholas</a></td></tr>
+ <tr><td valign="top" align="right">25.&nbsp;<td align="left"><a href="#ill25">Furnes: In Ste. Walburge's Church</a></td></tr>
+ <tr><td valign="top" align="right">26.&nbsp;<td align="left"><a href="#ill26">Nieuport: A Fair Parishioner</a></td></tr>
+ <tr><td valign="top" align="right">27.&nbsp;<td align="left"><a href="#ill27">Nieuport: Hall and Vicarage</a></td></tr>
+ <tr><td valign="top" align="right">28.&nbsp;<td align="left"><a href="#ill28">Nieuport: The Quay, with Eel-boats and Landing-stages</a></td></tr>
+ <tr><td valign="top" align="right">29.&nbsp;<td align="left"><a href="#ill29">Nieuport: The Town Hall</a></td></tr>
+ <tr><td valign="top" align="right">30.&nbsp;<td align="left"><a href="#ill30">Nieuport: Church Porch (Evensong)</a></td></tr>
+ <tr><td valign="top" align="right">31.&nbsp;<td align="left"><a href="#ill31">The Dunes: A Stormy Evening</a></td></tr>
+ <tr><td valign="top" align="right">32.&nbsp;<td align="left"><a href="#ill32">An Old Farmer</a></td></tr>
+ <tr><td valign="top" align="right">33.&nbsp;<td align="left"><a href="#ill33">La Panne: Interior of a Flemish Inn</a></td></tr>
+ <tr><td valign="top" align="right">34.&nbsp;<td align="left"><a href="#ill34">La Panne: A Flemish Inn&mdash;Playing Skittles</a></td></tr>
+ <tr><td valign="top" align="right">35.&nbsp;<td align="left"><a href="#ill35">Coxyde: A Shrimper on Horseback</a></td></tr>
+ <tr><td valign="top" align="right">36.&nbsp;<td align="left"><a href="#ill36">Coxyde: A Shrimper</a></td></tr>
+ <tr><td valign="top" align="right">37.&nbsp;<td align="left"><a href="#ill37">Adinkerque: Village and Canal</a></td></tr>
+</table>
+</div>
+
+<p class="chapter">
+<a name="page_1"><span class="page">Page 1</span></a> THE MARKET-PLACE
+AND BELFRY&mdash;EARLY HISTORY OF BRUGES</p>
+
+<p class="section">
+<a name="page_3"><span class="page">Page 3</span></a>
+BRUGES AND WEST FLANDERS</p>
+
+<h2>CHAPTER I</h2>
+
+<p class="subtitle">
+THE MARKET-PLACE AND BELFRY&mdash;EARLY HISTORY OF BRUGES
+</p>
+
+<p class="indent">
+Every visitor to 'the quaint old Flemish city' goes first to the
+Market-Place. On Saturday mornings the wide space beneath the mighty
+Belfry is full of stalls, with white canvas awnings, and heaped up
+with a curious assortment of goods. Clothing of every description,
+sabots and leathern shoes and boots, huge earthenware jars, pots
+and pans, kettles, cups and saucers, baskets, tawdry-coloured
+prints&mdash;chiefly of a religious character&mdash;lamps and
+candlesticks, the cheaper kinds of Flemish pottery, knives and
+forks, carpenters' tools, and such small articles as reels of thread,
+hatpins, tape, and even bottles of coarse scent, are piled on the
+stalls or spread out on the rough stones wherever there is a vacant
+space. Round the stalls, in the narrow <a name="page_4"><span
+class="page">Page 4</span></a> spaces between them, the people
+move about, talking, laughing, and bargaining. Their native Flemish
+is the tongue they use amongst themselves; but many of them speak
+what passes for French at Bruges, or even a few words of broken
+English, if some unwary stranger from across the Channel is rash
+enough to venture on doing business with these sharp-witted, plausible
+folk.
+</p>
+
+<p class="indent">
+At first sight this Market-Place, so famed in song, is a disappointment.
+The north side is occupied by a row of seventeenth-century houses
+turned into shops and third-rate caf&eacute;s. On the east is a
+modern post-office, dirty and badly ventilated, and some half-finished
+Government buildings. On the west are two houses which were once
+of some note&mdash;the Cranenburg, from the windows of which, in
+olden times, the Counts of Flanders, with the lords and ladies of
+their Court, used to watch the tournaments and pageants for which
+Bruges was celebrated, and in which Maximilian was imprisoned by
+the burghers in 1488; and the H&ocirc;tel de Bouchoute, a narrow,
+square building of dark red brick, with a gilded lion over the
+doorway. But the Cranenburg, once the 'most magnificent private
+residence in the Market-Place,' many years ago lost every trace of
+<a name="page_5"><span class="page">Page 5</span></a> its original
+splendour, and is now an unattractive hostelry, the headquarters of
+a smoking club; while the H&ocirc;tel de Bouchoute, turned into a
+clothier's shop, has little to distinguish it from its commonplace
+neighbours. Nevertheless,
+</p>
+
+<p class="bquote">
+'In the Market-Place of Bruges stands the Belfry old and brown;<br />
+&nbsp;Thrice consumed and thrice rebuilded, still it watches o'er the town.'
+</p>
+
+<p class="indent">
+It redeems the Market-Place from mediocrity. How long ago the first
+belfry tower of Bruges was built is unknown, but this at least
+is certain, that in the year 1280 a fire, in which the ancient
+archives of the town perished, destroyed the greater part of an
+old belfry, which some suppose may have been erected in the ninth
+century. On two subsequent occasions, in the fifteenth and eighteenth
+centuries, the present Belfry, erected on the ruins of the former
+structure, was damaged by fire; and now it stands on the south side
+of the Market-Place, rising 350 feet above the Halles, a massive
+building of the thirteenth and fourteenth centuries, solemn,
+weather-beaten, and majestic. 'For six hundred years,' it has been
+said, 'this Belfry has watched over the city of Bruges. It has
+beheld her triumphs and her failures, her glory and her shame, <a
+name="page_6"><span class="page">Page 6</span></a> her prosperity
+and her gradual decay, and, in spite of so many vicissitudes, it is
+still standing to bear witness to the genius of our forefathers,
+to awaken memories of old times and admiration for one of the most
+splendid monuments of civic architecture which the Middle Ages
+has produced.'[*]
+</p>
+
+<p class="footnote">
+[Footnote *: Gilliat-Smith, <i>The Story of Bruges</i>, p. 169 (Dent
+and Co., London, 1901). Mr. Gilliat-Smith's book is a picturesque
+account of Bruges in the Middle Ages. Of the English works relating
+to Bruges, there is nothing better than Mr. Wilfrid Robinson's
+<i>Bruges, an Historical Sketch</i>, a short and clear history,
+coming down to modern times (Louis de Plancke, Bruges, 1899).]
+</p>
+
+<p class="indent">
+In olden times watchmen were always on duty on the Belfry to give
+warning if enemies approached or fire broke out in any part of the
+town, a constant source of danger when most of the houses were
+built of wood. Even in these more prosaic days the custom of keeping
+watch and ward unceasingly is still maintained, and if there is a
+fire, the alarum-bell clangs over the city. All day, from year's
+end to year's end, the chimes ring every quarter of an hour; and
+all night, too, during the wildest storms of winter, when the wind
+shrieks round the tower; and in summer, when the old town lies
+slumbering in the moonlight.
+</p>
+
+<p><a name="ill2"></a></p>
+<table class="center" style="width: 756px;">
+<tr><td>
+ <img src="images/fig002.jpg" width="756" height="551" alt="Fig. 2">
+</td></tr>
+<tr><td>BRUGES.<br />A corner of the Market on the Grand'
+Place.</td></tr>
+</table>
+
+<p class="indent">
+From the top of the Belfry one looks down on <a name="page_7"><span
+class="page">Page 7</span></a> what is practically a medi&aelig;val
+city. The Market-Place seems to lose its modern aspect when seen
+from above; and all round there is nothing visible but houses with
+high-pointed gables and red roofs, intersected by canals, and streets
+so narrow that they appear to be mere lanes. Above these rise,
+sometimes from trees and gardens, churches, convents, venerable
+buildings, the lofty spire of Notre Dame, the tower of St. Sauveur,
+the turrets of the Gruthuise, the Hospital of St. John, famous
+for its paintings by Memlinc, the Church of Ste. Elizabeth in the
+grove of the B&eacute;guinage, the pinnacles of the Palais du Franc,
+the steep roof of the H&ocirc;tel de Ville, the dome of the Couvent
+des Dames Anglaises, and beyond that to the east the slender tower
+which rises above the Guildhouse of the Archers of St. Sebastian.
+The walls which guarded Bruges in troublous times have disappeared,
+though five of the old gateways remain; but the town is still contained
+within the limits which it had reached at the close of the thirteenth
+century.
+</p>
+
+<p class="indent">
+Behind the large square of the Halles, from which the Belfry rises,
+is the Rue du Vieux Bourg, the street of the Ouden Burg, or old
+fort; and to this street the student of history must first go if he
+wishes to understand what tradition, more or <a name="page_8"><span
+class="page">Page 8</span></a> less authentic, has to say about
+the earliest phases in the strange, eventful past of Bruges. The
+wide plain of Flanders, the northern portion of the country which
+we now call Belgium, was in ancient times a dreary fenland, the
+haunt of wild beasts and savage men; thick, impenetrable forests,
+tracts of barren sand, sodden marshes, covered it; and sluggish
+streams, some whose waters never found their way to the sea, ran
+through it. One of these rivulets, called the Roya, was crossed by
+a bridge, to defend which, according to early tradition, a fort,
+or 'burg,' was erected in the fourth century. This fort stood on
+an islet formed by the meeting of the Roya with another stream,
+called the Boterbeke, and a moat which joined the two. We may suppose
+that near the fort, which was probably a small building of rough
+stones, or perhaps merely a wooden stockade, a few huts were put
+up by people who came there for protection, and as time went on
+the settlement increased. 'John of Ypres, Abbot of St. Bertin,'
+says Mr. Robinson, 'who wrote in the fourteenth century, describes
+how Bruges was born and christened: "Very soon pedlars began to
+settle down under the walls of the fort to supply the wants of
+its inmates. Next came merchants, with <a name="page_9"><span
+class="page">Page 9</span></a> their valuable wares. Innkeepers
+followed, who began to build houses, where those who could not
+find lodging in the fort found food and shelter. Those who thus
+turned away from the fort would say, 'Let us go to the bridge.'
+And when the houses near the bridge became so numerous as to form
+a town, it kept as its proper name the Flemish word <i>Brugge</i>."
+</p>
+
+<p><a name="ill3"></a></p>
+<table class="center" style="width: 539px;">
+<tr><td>
+ <img src="images/fig003.jpg" width="539" height="724" alt="Fig. 3">
+</td></tr>
+<tr><td>BELL-RINGER PLAYING A CHIME.</td></tr>
+</table>
+
+<p class="indent">
+The small island on which this primitive township stood was bounded
+on the south and east by the Roya, on the north by the Boterbeke,
+and on the west by the moat joining these two streams. The Roya
+still flows along between the site of the old burg and an avenue
+of lime-trees called the Dyver till it reaches the end of the Quai
+du Rosaire, when it turns to the north. A short distance beyond
+this point it is vaulted over, and runs on beneath the streets
+and houses of the town. The Rue du Vieux Bourg is built over the
+course of the Boterbeke, which now runs under it and under the Belfry
+(erected on foundations sunk deep into the bed of the stream), until
+it joins the subterranean channel of the Roya at the south-east
+corner of the Market-Place. The moat which joined these two streams
+and guarded the west side of the island was filled up long ago,
+and its <a name="page_10"><span class="page">Page 10</span></a>
+bed is now covered by the Rue Neuve, which connects the Rue du
+Vieux Bourg with the Dyver.
+</p>
+
+<p class="indent">
+Thus the boundaries of early Bruges can easily be traced; but nothing
+remains of the ancient buildings, though we read of a warehouse,
+booths, and a prison, besides the dwelling-houses of the townsfolk.
+The elements, at least, of civic life were there; and tradition
+says that in or near the village, for it was nothing more, some
+altars of the Christian faith were set up during the seventh and
+eighth centuries. Trade, too, soon began to flourish, and grew
+rapidly as the population of the place increased. The Roya, flowing
+eastwards, fell into the Zwijn, an arm of the sea, which then ran
+up close to the town, and on which stood Damme, now a small inland
+village, but once a busy port crowded with shipping. The commercial
+life of Bruges depended on the Zwijn; and that much business was
+done before the close of the ninth century is shown by the fact
+that Bruges had then a coinage of its own.[*] It was from such
+small beginnings that this famous, 'Venice of the North' arose.
+</p>
+
+<p class="footnote">
+[Footnote *: Gilliodts van Severen, <i>Bruges Ancienne et Moderne</i>,
+pp. 7, 8, 9.]
+</p>
+
+<p><a name="ill4"></a></p>
+<table class="center" style="width: 754px;">
+<tr><td>
+ <img src="images/fig004.jpg" width="754" height="560" alt="Fig. 4">
+</td></tr>
+<tr><td>BRUGES.<br />Porte d'Ostende.</td></tr>
+</table>
+
+<p class="chapter">
+<a name="page_11"><span class="page">Page 11</span></a> BALDWIN
+BRAS-DE-FRE&mdash;THE PLACE DU BOURG&mdash;MURDER OF CHARLES THE
+GOOD</p>
+
+<h2><a name="page_13"><span class="page">Page 13</span></a>
+CHAPTER II</h2>
+
+<p class="subtitle">
+BALDWIN BRAS-DE-FER&mdash;THE PLACE DU BOURG&mdash;MURDER OF CHARLES
+THE GOOD
+</p>
+
+<p class="indent">
+Towards the end of the ninth and at the beginning of the tenth
+century great changes took place on the banks of the Roya, and
+the foundations of Bruges as we know it now were laid. Just as in
+the memorable years 1814 and 1815 the empire of Napoleon fell into
+fragments, and princes and statesmen hastened to readjust the map of
+Europe in their own interests, so in the ninth century the empire of
+Charlemagne was crumbling away; and in the scramble for the spoils,
+the Normans carried fire and sword into Flanders. Charles the Bald,
+King of the Franks, at this crisis called to his aid the strong arm
+of Baldwin, a Flemish chief of whose ancestry we know little, but
+who soon became famous as Baldwin Bras-de-Fer&mdash;Baldwin of the
+Iron Arm, so called because, in peace or war, he was never seen
+without his coat of mail. This grim warrior <a name="page_14"><span
+class="page">Page 14</span></a> had fallen in love with the daughter
+of Charles the Bald, Judith, who had been already twice married,
+first to the Saxon King Ethelwulf (after the death of his first
+wife Osberga, mother of Alfred the Great) and secondly to Ethelbald,
+on whose death she left England and went to live at Senlis. Baldwin
+persuaded the Princess to run away with him; and they were married
+without the knowledge of her father, to escape whose vengeance
+the culprits fled to Rome. Pope Nicholas I. brought about a
+reconciliation; and Charles not only pardoned his son-in-law, but
+appointed him ruler of Flanders under the title of Marquis, which
+was afterwards changed into that of Count. It is to the steel-clad
+Baldwin Bras-de-Fer that the Counts of Flanders trace the origin
+of their title; and he was, moreover, the real founder of that
+Bruges which rose to such glory in the Middle Ages, and is still,
+though fallen from its high estate, the picturesque capital of West
+Flanders, whither artists flock to wander about amidst the canals
+and bridges, the dismantled ramparts, the narrow streets with their
+curious houses, and the old buildings which bear such eloquent
+testimony to the ruin which long ago overtook what was once an
+opulent and powerful city.
+</p>
+
+<p class="indent">
+<a name="page_15"><span class="page">Page 15</span></a> When the
+wrath of his father-in-law had been appeased, Baldwin, now responsible
+for the defence of Flanders, came to Bruges with his wife, and
+there established his Court. But the old burg, it seems, was not
+thought capable of holding out against the Normans, who could easily
+land on the banks of the Zwijn; and Baldwin, therefore, set about
+building a new stronghold on the east side of the old burg, and
+close to it. It was surrounded partly by the main stream of the
+Roya, and partly by backwaters flowing from it. Here he built a
+fortress for himself and his household, a church dedicated to St.
+Donatian, a prison, and a 'ghiselhuis,' or house for the safe keeping
+of hostages. The whole was enclosed by walls, built close to the
+edge of the surrounding waters.
+</p>
+
+<p class="indent">
+The Roya is now vaulted over where it ran along the west side of
+Baldwin's stronghold, separating it from the original burg, and
+the watercourses which defended it on the north and east are filled
+up; but the stream on the south still remains in the shape of the
+canal which skirts the Quai des Marbriers, from which a bridge
+leads by a narrow lane, called the Rue de l'&Acirc;ne Aveugle,
+under an arch of gilded stonework, into the open space now known as
+the Place du Bourg. Here <a name="page_16"><span class="page">Page
+16</span></a> we are at the very heart of Bruges, on the ground where
+Baldwin's stronghold stood, with its four gates and drawbridges, and
+the high walls frowning above the homes of the townsmen clustering
+round them. The aspect of the place is completely changed since
+those early days. A grove of chestnut-trees covers the site of
+the Church of St. Donatian; not a stone remains of Bras-de-Fer's
+rude palace; and instead of the prison and the hostage-house, there
+are the H&ocirc;tel de Ville, now more than five hundred years
+old, from whose windows the Counts of Flanders swore obedience to
+the statutes and privileges of the town, the Palais de Justice,
+and the dark crypt beneath the chapel which shelters the mysterious
+Relic of the Holy Blood.
+</p>
+
+<p><a name="ill5"></a></p>
+<table class="center" style="width: 498px;">
+<tr><td>
+ <img src="images/fig005.jpg" width="498" height="811" alt="Fig. 5">
+</td></tr>
+<tr><td>BRUGES.<br />Rue de l'&Acirc;ne Aveugle (showing end
+of Town Hall<br />and Bridge connecting it with Palais de
+Justice).</td></tr>
+</table>
+
+<p class="indent">
+In summer it is a warm, quiet, pleasant spot. Under the shade of
+the trees, near the statue of Van Eyck, women selling flowers sit
+beside rows of geraniums, roses, lilies, pansies, which give a
+touch of bright colour to the scene. Artists from all parts of
+Europe set up their easels and paint. Young girls are gravely busy
+with their water-colours. Black-robed nuns and bare-footed Carmelites
+pass silently along. Perhaps some traveller from America opens his
+guide-book to study the <a name="page_17"><span class="page">Page
+17</span></a> map of a city which had risen to greatness long before
+Columbus crossed the seas. A few English people hurry across, and
+pass under the archway of the Rue de l'&Acirc;ne Aveugle on the
+way to their tennis-ground beyond the Porte de Gand. The sunshine
+glitters on the gilded fa&ccedil;ade of the Palais de Justice,
+and lights up the statues in their niches on the front of the
+H&ocirc;tel de Ville. There is no traffic, no noise. Everything
+is still and peaceful. The chimes, ever and anon ringing out from
+the huge Belfry, which rises high above the housetops to the west,
+alone break the silence.
+</p>
+
+<p class="indent">
+This is Bruges sleeping peacefully in old age, lulled to rest by
+the sound of its own carillon. But it is easy, standing there, to
+recall the past, and to fancy the scenes which took place from time
+to time throughout the long period of foreign danger and internal
+strife. We can imagine the Bourg, now so peaceful, full of armed
+men, rushing to the Church of St. Donatian on the morning when
+Charles the Good was slain; how, in later times, the turbulent
+burghers, fiery partisans of rival factions, Clauwerts shouting
+for the Flemish Lion, and Leliarts marshalled under the Lily of
+France, raged and threatened; how the stones were splashed with blood
+on the day of the Bruges <a name="page_18"><span class="page">Page
+18</span></a> Matins, when so many Frenchmen perished; or what shouts
+were raised when the Flemish host came back victorious from the
+Battle of the Golden Spurs.
+</p>
+
+<p class="indent">
+Though every part of Bruges&mdash;not only the Bourg, but the great
+Market-Place, and the whole maze of streets and lanes and canals
+of which it consists&mdash;has a story of its own, some of these
+stories stand out by themselves; and amongst these one of the most
+dramatic is the story of the death of Charles the Good.
+</p>
+
+<p class="indent">
+More than two hundred and fifty years had passed away since the
+coming of Baldwin Bras-de-Fer; Bruges had spread far beyond the
+walls of the Bourg; and Charles, who had succeeded his cousin Baldwin
+VII., was Count of Flanders. He was called 'the Good' because of
+his just rule and simple life, and still more, perhaps, because he
+clothed and fed the poor&mdash;not only in Bruges, but throughout
+all Flanders. The common people loved him, but his charities gave
+offence to the rich. He had, moreover, incurred the special enmity
+of the Erembalds, a powerful family, who, though not of noble origin
+themselves, were connected by marriage with many noble houses.
+They had supported his claim to the <a name="page_19"><span
+class="page">Page 19</span></a> throne of Flanders, which had been
+disputed, and he had rewarded their services by heaping favours
+on them. But, after a time, they began to oppose the methods of
+government which Charles applied to Flanders. They resented most
+of all one of his decrees which made it unlawful for persons not
+in his service to carry arms in time of peace. This decree, which
+was pronounced in order to prevent the daily scenes of violence
+which Charles abhorred, was declared by the Erembalds to be an
+interference with Flemish liberty. It did not affect them personally,
+for they held office under the Count; but they none the less opposed
+it vehemently.
+</p>
+
+<p class="indent">
+While Charles was thus on bad terms with the Erembalds, a deadly
+feud existed between them and the Straetens, another notable family,
+which grew to such a height that the rival clans made open war upon
+each other, pillaging, burning, and slaying after the manner of
+these times. Charles called the leaders of both sides before him,
+and made them swear to keep the peace; but when he was at Ypres in
+the autumn of 1126, a complaint was laid before him that Bertulf,
+head of the Erembalds, who was also Provost of St. Donatian's,
+had sent one of his nephews, Burchard <a name="page_20"><span
+class="page">Page 20</span></a> by name, on a raid into the lands
+of the Straetens, whose cattle he had carried off. On hearing of
+this outrage, Charles gave orders that Burchard's house should
+be pulled down, and that he should compensate the Straetens for
+their losses. The Erembalds were powerless to resist this order,
+and Burchard's house was razed to the ground.
+</p>
+
+<p class="indent">
+It has been said that this was only the beginning of strong measures
+which Charles was about to take against the Erembalds; but there
+is no certainty as to what his intentions really were. He then
+lived in the Loove, a mansion which he had built in the Bourg at
+Bruges, on the site now occupied by the Palais de Justice; and
+there, on his return from Ypres, he had a meeting with some of the
+Erembalds, who had been sent to plead on behalf of Burchard. As
+to what took place at this interview there is some doubt. According
+to one account, Charles drank wine with the delegates, and granted
+a free pardon to Burchard, on condition that he kept the peace.
+According to another account, his demeanour was so unbending that
+the Erembalds left his presence full of angry suspicions, which
+they communicated to their friends. Whatever may have happened,
+they were bent on mischief. Burchard was sent for, and a secret <a
+name="page_21"><span class="page">Page 21</span></a> consultation
+was held, after which Burchard and a chosen few assembled in a
+house on the Bourg and arranged their plans. This was on the night
+of March 1, 1127.
+</p>
+
+<p><a name="ill6"></a></p>
+<table class="center" style="width: 544px;">
+<tr><td>
+ <img src="images/fig006.jpg" width="544" height="754" alt="Fig. 6">
+</td></tr>
+<tr><td>BRUGES.<br />Quai du Rosaire.</td></tr>
+</table>
+
+<p class="indent">
+At break of day next morning a cold, heavy mist hung low over Bruges,
+and in the Bourg everything was shrouded in darkness. But already
+some poor men were waiting in the courtyard of the Loove, to whom
+Charles gave alms on his way to early Mass in the Church of St.
+Donatian. Then he went along a private passage which led into the
+church, and knelt in prayer before the Lady Altar. It was his custom
+to give help to the needy when in church, and he had just put some
+money into the hands of a poor woman, when suddenly she called out:
+'Beware, Sir Count!' He turned quickly round, and there, sword
+in hand, was Burchard, who had stolen up the dim aisle to where
+Charles was kneeling. The next moment Burchard struck, and Charles
+fell dead upon the steps of the altar.
+</p>
+
+<p class="indent">
+Then followed a scene of wild confusion. The woman ran out into
+the Bourg, calling loudly that the Count was slain. In the midst of
+the uproar some of the royal household fled in terror, while others
+who entered the church were butchered by <a name="page_22"><span
+class="page">Page 22</span></a> the Erembalds, who next attacked the
+Loove, and, having pillaged it, rushed over Bruges, slaughtering
+without mercy all who dared to oppose them.
+</p>
+
+<p class="indent">
+After some time one of the Count's servants ventured to cover the
+dead body with a winding-sheet, and to surround it with lighted
+tapers; and there it remained lying on the pavement, until at last
+the Erembalds, who were afraid to bury it in Bruges lest the sight
+of the tomb of Charles the Good should one day rouse the townsmen
+to avenge his death, sent a message to Ghent, begging the Abbot
+of St. Peter's to take it away and bury it in his own church. The
+Abbot came to Bruges, and before dawn the body of the murdered Count
+was being stealthily carried along the aisles of St. Donatian's,
+when a great crowd rushed in, declaring that the bones of Charles
+must be allowed to rest in peace at Bruges. The arches rang with
+cries, chairs were overturned, stools and candlesticks were thrown
+about, as the people, pressing and struggling round the Abbot and
+his servants, told Bertulf, with many an oath, that he must yield
+to their wishes. At last the Provost submitted, and on the morrow,
+just two days after the murder, the body of Charles was buried
+before <a name="page_23"><span class="page">Page 23</span></a>
+the Lady Altar, on the very spot, it is said, where the statue of
+Van Eyck now stands under the trees in the Bourg.
+</p>
+
+<p class="indent">
+The triumph of the Erembalds was short, for the death of Charles
+the Good was terribly avenged by his friends, who came to Bruges
+at the head of a large force. A fierce struggle took place at the
+Rue de l'&Acirc;ne Aveugle, where many were slain. The Erembalds
+were driven into the Bourg, the gates of which they shut; but an
+entrance was forced, and, after desperate fighting, some thirty of
+them, all who remained alive, were compelled to take refuge, first
+in the nave and then in the tower of the Church of St. Donatian,
+where, defending themselves with the courage of despair, they made a
+last stand, until, worn out by fatigue and hunger, they surrendered
+and came down. Bertulf the Provost, Burchard, and a few of the
+other ringleaders had fled some days before, and so escaped, for
+a time at least, the fate of their companions, who, having been
+imprisoned in a dungeon, were taken to the top of the church tower
+and flung down one by one on to the stones of the Bourg. 'Their
+bodies,' says Mr. Gilliat-Smith, 'were thrown into a marsh beyond
+the village of St. Andr&eacute;, and for years afterwards no man after
+<a name="page_24"><span class="page">Page 24</span></a> nightfall
+would willingly pass that way.' In the Church of St. Sauveur there
+is a costly shrine containing what are said to be the bones of
+Charles the Good, taken from their first resting-place, at which
+twice every year a festival is held in commemoration of his virtues.
+</p>
+
+<p class="chapter">
+<a name="page_25"><span class="page">Page 25</span></a> THE
+B&Eacute;GUINAGE&mdash;CHURCHES&mdash;THE RELIC OF THE HOLY BLOOD
+</p>
+
+<h2><a name="page_27"><span class="page">Page 27</span></a>
+CHAPTER III</h2>
+
+<p class="subtitle">
+THE B&Eacute;GUINAGE&mdash;CHURCHES&mdash;THE RELIC OF THE HOLY
+BLOOD
+</p>
+
+<p class="indent">
+Bruges is one of the most Catholic towns in Catholic Flanders.
+Convents and religious houses of all sorts have always flourished
+there, and at present there are no less than forty-five of these
+establishments. Probably one of the most interesting to English
+people is the Couvent des Dames Anglaises, which was founded in
+1629 by the English Augustinian Nuns of Ste. Monica's Convent at
+Louvain. Its chapel, with a fine dome of the eighteenth century,
+contains a beautiful altar built of marbles brought from Egypt,
+Greece, and Persia; and amongst its possessions is the rosary of
+Catherine of Braganza (Queen of Charles II. of England), who died
+at Bruges.
+</p>
+
+<p class="indent">
+And then there is the B&eacute;guinage. There are B&eacute;guinages
+at Amsterdam and Breda, but with this exception of Holland, Belgium
+is now the only country in Europe where these societies, the <a
+name="page_28"><span class="page">Page 28</span></a> origin of
+whose name is uncertain, are to be found. They consist of spinsters
+or widows, who, though bound by a few conventual oaths during their
+connection with the society, may return to the world. On entering
+each sister pays a sum of money to the general funds, and at first
+lives for a time along with other novices. At the end of this term
+of probation they are at liberty to occupy one of the small dwellings
+within the precincts of the B&eacute;guinage, and keep house for
+themselves. They spend their time in sewing, making lace, educating
+poor children, visiting the sick, or any form of good works for
+which they may have a taste. They are under a Mother Superior,
+the 'Grande Dame,' appointed by the Bishop of the diocese, and
+must attend the services in the church of their B&eacute;guinage.
+Thus the B&eacute;guine, living generally in a house of her own,
+and free to reenter the world, occupies a different position from
+the nuns of the better-known Orders, though so long as she remains
+a member of her society she is bound by the vows of chastity and
+obedience to her ecclesiastical superiors.
+</p>
+
+<p><a name="ill7"></a></p>
+<table class="center" style="width: 737px;">
+<tr><td>
+ <img src="images/fig007.jpg" width="737" height="570" alt="Fig. 7">
+</td></tr>
+<tr><td>BRUGES.<br />The B&eacute;guinage.</td></tr>
+</table>
+
+<p class="indent">
+The B&eacute;guinage at Bruges, founded in the thirteenth century,
+is situated near the Minnewater, or Lac d'Amour, which every visitor
+is taken to <a name="page_29"><span class="page">Page 29</span></a>
+see. This sheet of placid water, bordered by trees, which was a
+harbour in the busy times, is one of the prettiest bits of Bruges;
+and they say that if you go there at midnight, and stand upon the
+bridge which crosses it on the south, any wish which you may form
+will certainly come to pass. It is better to go alone, for strict
+silence is necessary to insure the working of this charm. A bridge
+over the water which runs from the Lac d'Amour leads through a
+gateway into the B&eacute;guinage, where a circle of small
+houses&mdash;whitewashed, with stepped gables, and green woodwork
+on the windows&mdash;surrounds a lawn planted with tall trees.
+There is a view of the spire of Notre Dame beyond the roofs, a
+favourite subject for the painters who come here in numbers on
+summer afternoons. The Church of Ste. Elizabeth, an unpretentious
+building, stands on one side of the lawn; and within it, many times
+a day, the Sisters may be seen on their knees repeating the Offices
+of the Church. When the service is finished they rise, remove their
+white head-coverings, and return demurely to their quaint little
+homes.
+</p>
+
+<p class="indent">
+Bruges has, needless to say, many churches, but nothing which can
+be compared to the magnificent Cathedral of Antwerp, to the imposing
+front of <a name="page_30"><span class="page">Page 30</span></a>
+Ste. Gudule at Brussels, or to the huge mass which forms such a
+conspicuous landmark for several leagues round Malines. Still,
+some of the churches are not without interest: the Cathedral of
+St. Sauveur, where the stalls of the Knights of the Order of the
+Golden Fleece, which was founded at Bruges, are to be seen in the
+choir, and over one of them the arms of Edward IV. of England; the
+curious little Church of Jerusalem, with its 'Holy Sepulchre,'
+an exact copy of the traditionary grave in Palestine&mdash;a dark
+vault, entered by a passage so low that one must crawl through it,
+and where a light burns before a figure which lies there wrapped
+in a linen cloth; and the Church of Notre Dame, which contains
+some treasures, such as a lovely white marble statue of the Virgin
+and Child, from the chisel of Michael Angelo; the tombs of Charles
+the Bold of Burgundy and his daughter&mdash;the 'Gentle Mary,'
+whose untimely death at Bruges in 1482, after a short married life,
+saved her from witnessing the misfortunes which clouded the last
+years of her husband, the Archduke Maximilian; and a portion of
+the Holy Cross, which came to Bruges in the fifteenth century.
+The story goes that a rich merchant, a Dutchman from Dordrecht,
+Schoutteeten by name, who lived at Bruges, was <a name="page_31"><span
+class="page">Page 31</span></a> travelling through Syria in the
+year 1380. One day, when journeying with a caravan, he saw a man
+hiding something in a wood, and, following him, discovered that
+it was a box, which he suspected might contain something valuable.
+Mijnheer Schoutteeten appropriated the box, and carried it home
+from Syria to Dordrecht, where a series of miracles began to occur
+of such a nature as to make it practically certain that the box
+(or some wood which it contained, for on this point the legend is
+vague) was a part of the true Cross! In course of time Schoutteeten
+died in the odour of sanctity, having on his death-bed expressed a
+wish that the wood which he had brought from the East should be
+given to the Church of Notre Dame at Bruges. His widow consoled
+herself by taking a second husband, who, Uutenhove by name, fulfilled
+the pious request of his predecessor, and thus another relic was
+added to the large collection which is preserved in the various
+churches and religious houses of Bruges. It was brought to Flanders
+in the year 1473, and must have been a source of considerable revenue
+to the Church since then.
+</p>
+
+<p class="indent">
+The buildings of Notre Dame, with the well-known Gruthuise Mansion
+which adjoins them, <a name="page_32"><span class="page">Page
+32</span></a> and the singularly graceful spire, higher than the
+Belfry tower, rising from the exquisite portico called 'Het Paradijs,'
+form a very beautiful group; but, with this exception, there is nothing
+remarkable about the churches of Bruges. One of them, however, has a
+peculiar interest&mdash;the Chapelle du Saint-Sang, which stands in
+the Place du Bourg in the corner next to the H&ocirc;tel de Ville.
+It is built in two stories. The lower, a dark, solemn chapel, like
+a crypt, was dedicated to St. Basil at an early period, and is
+one of the oldest buildings in Bruges. The greater part of the
+upper story does not date further back than the fifteenth century.
+But it is not the fabric itself, venerable though that is, but
+what it contains, that makes this place the Holy of Holies in the
+religious life of Bruges; for here, in a costly shrine of gold and
+silver adorned with precious stones, they guard the wonderful relic
+which was brought from Palestine in the time of the Crusaders by
+Thierry d'Alsace, Count of Flanders, and which is still worshipped
+by thousands of devout believers every year.
+</p>
+
+<p class="indent">
+Thierry d'Alsace, the old chroniclers tell us, visited the Holy
+Land four times, and was the leader of the Flemish warriors who,
+roused by the eloquence of St. Bernard of Clairvaux, joined the
+<a name="page_33"><span class="page">Page 33</span></a> second
+Crusade in the summer of 1147. He had married Sybilla, sister of
+Baldwin, King of Jerusalem; and when the time came for his return to
+Europe, his brother-in-law and the Patriarch of Jerusalem resolved
+to reward his services by giving him a part of the most valuable
+relic which the Church in Palestine possessed, which was a small
+quantity of a red liquid, said to be blood and water, which, according
+to immemorial tradition, Joseph of Arimath&aelig;a had preserved
+after he had washed the dead body of Jesus.
+</p>
+
+<p class="indent">
+The earlier history of this relic is unknown, and is as obscure
+as that of the other 'Relics of the Holy Blood' which are to be
+found in various places. But there can be no doubt whatever that
+in the twelfth century the Christians at Jerusalem believed that
+it had been in existence since the day of the Crucifixion. It was,
+therefore, presented to Thierry with great solemnity in the Church
+of the Holy Sepulchre during the Christmas festivals of 1148. The
+Patriarch, having displayed the vessel which contained it to the
+people, divided the contents into two portions, one of which he
+poured into a small vial, the mouth of which was carefully sealed
+up and secured with gold wire. This vessel was next enclosed in a
+crystal tube, <a name="page_34"><span class="page">Page 34</span></a>
+shut at the ends with golden stoppers, to which a chain of silver
+was attached. Then the Patriarch gave the tube to Baldwin, from
+whose hands Thierry, kneeling on the steps of the altar, received
+it with profound emotion.[*]
+</p>
+
+<p class="footnote">
+[Footnote *: Canon van Haecke, <i>Le Pr&eacute;cieux Sang &agrave;
+Bruges</i> (fourth edition), pp. 95, 96.]
+</p>
+
+<p class="indent">
+The Count, however, did not think his hands, which had shed so
+much human blood, worthy to convey the relic home; and he entrusted
+it to Leonius, chaplain of the Flemish Army, who hung it round
+his neck, and so carried it to Bruges, where he arrived in May,
+1150, along with Thierry, who, mounted on a white horse led by two
+barefooted monks, and holding the relic in his hand, was conducted
+in state to the Bourg, where he deposited the precious object in
+the Chapel of St. Basil, which is commonly known as the Chapel
+of the Holy Blood.
+</p>
+
+<p class="indent">
+After some time the relic was found to be dry, but, strange to say,
+it became liquid, we are told upon the authority of Pope Clement
+V., every Friday, 'usually at six o'clock.' This weekly miracle
+continued till about the year 1325. Since then it has never taken
+place except once, in 1388, when the vial containing the relic
+was being transferred <a name="page_35"><span class="page">Page
+35</span></a> to a new crystal tube; and on this occasion William,
+Bishop of Ancona, was astonished to see the relic turning redder
+than usual, and some drops, as of newly-shed blood, flowing within
+the vial, which he was holding in his hand. Many notable persons
+who were present, one of them the Bishop of Lincoln, testified
+to this event!
+</p>
+
+<p class="indent">
+Other miracles wrought through the agency of this relic are recorded.
+A child which had been born dead was taken to the shrine, and came
+to life after three days. A young girl who had suffered for twenty
+months from an issue of blood, and for whom the doctors could do
+nothing, was cured by the application of a piece of cloth which had
+been used to cover the relic. Another girl who had been paralyzed
+for a long time, being carried into the Chapel of St. Basil, was
+restored to complete strength the moment she kissed the crystal tube.
+In December, 1689, a fire broke out in the Bourg, and threatened
+to destroy the H&ocirc;tel de Ville; but a priest brought forth
+the tube containing the relic, and held it up before the flames,
+which were instantly extinguished. These and many other similar
+miracles, confirmed by the oath of witnesses and received by the
+Church at the present day as authentic, make the relic an <a
+name="page_36"><span class="page">Page 36</span></a> object of
+profound devotion to the people of Bruges and the peasants of the
+surrounding country, who go in crowds to bow before it twice every
+Friday, when it is exhibited for public worship.
+</p>
+
+<p class="indent">
+It was nearly lost on several occasions in the days of almost constant
+war, and during the French Revolution it was concealed for some
+years in the house of a private citizen. The Chapel of St. Basil
+suffered from the disturbed condition of the country, and when
+Napoleon came to Bruges in 1810 it was such a complete wreck that
+the magistrates were on the point of sweeping it away altogether.
+But Napoleon saved it, declaring that when he looked on the ruins
+he fancied himself once more amongst the antiquities of Egypt,
+and that to destroy them would be a crime. Four years after the
+Battle of Waterloo the relic was brought out from its hiding-place,
+and in 1856 the chapel was restored from the designs of two English
+architects, William Brangwyn and Thomas Harper King.[*]
+</p>
+
+<p class="footnote">
+[Footnote *: Gilliat-Smith, <i>The Story of Bruges</i>, p. 103.]
+</p>
+
+<p class="indent">
+On the first Monday after the 2nd of May every year the town of
+Bruges is full of strangers, who have come to witness the celebrated
+'Procession <a name="page_37"><span class="page">Page 37</span></a>
+of the Holy Blood,' which there is good reason to believe has taken
+place annually (except during the French Revolution) for the last
+755 years.
+</p>
+
+<p class="indent">
+Very early in the day a Mass is celebrated in the Upper Chapel
+of the Holy Blood, which is crowded to the doors. In the crypt,
+or lower chapel, where many people are kneeling before the sacred
+images, the gloom, the silence, the bent figures dimly seen in
+the faint yellow light of a few tapers, make up a weird scene all
+the morning till about nine o'clock, when the relic, in its
+'ch&acirc;sse,' or tabernacle, is carried to the Cathedral of St.
+Sauveur, and placed on the high altar, while a pontifical Mass is
+celebrated by one of the Bishops. When that is done, the procession
+starts on its march along the chief thoroughfares of the town.
+The houses are decorated with flags, and candles burn in almost
+every window. Through the narrow streets, between crowds of people
+standing on the pavements or looking down from the windows, while
+the church bells ring and wreaths of incense fill the air, bands of
+music, squadrons of cavalry, crucifixes, shrines, images, the banners
+of the parishes and the guilds, heralds in their varied dresses,
+bareheaded pilgrims from England, France, and other countries, pages,
+maidens in white, bearing <a name="page_38"><span class="page">Page
+38</span></a> palms, or crowns of thorn, or garlands, priests with
+relics, acolytes and chanting choristers, pass slowly along. The
+buffoonery of the Middle Ages, when giants, ballet-dancers, and
+mythological characters figured in the scene, has been abandoned;
+but Abraham and Isaac, King David and King Solomon, Joseph and the
+Virgin Mary, the Magi, and many saints and martyrs, walk in the long
+procession, which is closed by the Bishops and clergy accompanying
+the gorgeous shrine containing the small tube of something red
+like blood, before which all the people sink to the ground, and
+remain kneeling till it has passed.
+</p>
+
+<p class="indent">
+The proceedings of the day end with a benediction at an altar erected
+in front of the H&ocirc;tel de Ville. The Bourg is filled from
+side to side with those who have taken part in the procession,
+and by thousands of spectators who have followed them from all
+parts of the town to witness the closing scene. The crowd gathers
+under the trees and along the sides of the square, the centre of
+which, occupied by the processionists, is a mass of colour, above
+which the standards and images which have been carried through
+the streets rise against the dark background of the H&ocirc;tel
+de Ville and the Chapel of the Holy Blood. The relic is taken out
+<a name="page_39"><span class="page">Page 39</span></a> of the
+ch&acirc;sse, and a priest, standing on the steps of the altar
+high above the crowd, holds it up to be worshipped. Everyone bows
+low, and then, in dead silence, the mysterious object is carried
+into the chapel, and with this the chief religious ceremony of
+the year at Bruges is brought to a close.
+</p>
+
+<p class="indent">
+There are sights in Bruges that night, within a stone's-throw of
+the Chapel of the Holy Blood, which are worth seeing, they contrast
+so strangely with all this fervour of religion.
+</p>
+
+<p class="indent">
+The curtain has fallen upon the drama of the day. The flags are
+furled and put aside. The vestments are in the sacristy. Shrines,
+canopies, censers, all the objects carried in the procession, have
+disappeared into the churches. The church doors are locked, and the
+images are left to stand all night without so much as one solitary
+worshipper kneeling before them. The Bourg is empty and dark, steeped
+in black shadows at the door of the chapel where the relic has been
+laid to rest. It is all quiet there, but a stroll through the Rue
+de l'&Acirc;ne Aveugle and across the canal by the bridge which
+leads to the purlieus of the fish-markets brings one upon another
+scene. Every second house, if not every house, is a caf&eacute;,
+'herberg,' or 'estaminet,' <a name="page_40"><span class="page">Page
+40</span></a> with a bar and sanded floor and some rough chairs
+and tables; and on the night of the Procession of the Holy Blood
+they are crowded to the doors. Peasants from the country are there
+in great force. For some days before and after the sacred festival
+the villagers are in the habit of coming into Bruges&mdash;whole
+families of them, father and mother, sons and daughters, all in
+their best finery. They walk through the streets, following the
+route by which the Holy Blood is carried, telling their beads and
+saying their prayers, crossing themselves, and kneeling at any
+image of Christ, or Madonna, or saint, which they may notice at
+the street corners. It is curious to watch their sunburnt faces
+and uncouth ways as they slouch along, their hands busy with their
+beads, and their lips never ceasing for a moment to mutter prayer
+after prayer. They follow in the wake of the Procession of the
+Holy Blood, or wait to fall upon their knees when it passes and
+receive the blessing of the Bishop, who walks with fingers raised,
+scattering benedictions from side to side. In the evening, before
+starting for home, they go to the caf&eacute;s.
+</p>
+
+<p class="indent">
+As evening passes into night the sounds of music and dancing are
+heard. At the doors people sit <a name="page_41"><span class="page">
+Page 41</span></a> drinking round tables placed on the pavement or in
+the rank, poisonous gutter. The hot air is heavy with the smell
+of decayed fish. Inside the caf&eacute;s men and women, old and
+young, are dancing in the fetid atmosphere to jingling pianos or
+accordions. The heat, the close, sour fumes of musty clothing, tobacco,
+beer, gin, fried fish, and unwashed humanity, are overpowering.
+There are disgusting sights in all directions. Fat women, with
+red, perspiring faces and dirty fingers, still clutching their
+rosaries; tawdry girls, field-workers, with flushed faces, dancing
+with country lads, most of whom are more than half tipsy; ribald
+jokes and laughter and leering eyes; reeling, drunken men; maudlin
+affection in one corner, and jealous disputing in another; crying
+babies; beer and gin spilt on the tables; and all sorts of indecency
+and hideous details which Swift might have gloated over or Hogarth
+painted.
+</p>
+
+<p class="indent">
+This is how the day of the Holy Blood procession is finished by
+many of the countryfolk. The brutal cabaret comes after the prayers
+and adoration of the morning! It is a world of contrasts. But soon
+the lights are out, the shutters are put up, the last customer goes
+staggering homewards, and the Belfry speaks again, as it spoke
+when <a name="page_42"><span class="page">Page 42</span></a> the
+sweet singer lay dreaming at the Fleur-de-Bl&eacute;:
+</p>
+
+<p class="bquote">
+'In the ancient town of Bruges,<br />
+ In the quaint old Flemish city,<br />
+ As the evening shades descended,<br />
+ Low and loud and sweetly blended,<br />
+ Low at times and loud at times,<br />
+ And changing like a poet's rhymes,<br />
+ Rang the beautiful wild chimes<br />
+ From the Belfry in the market<br />
+ Of the ancient town of Bruges.<br />
+ Then, with deep sonorous clangour,<br />
+ Calmly answering their sweet anger,<br />
+ When the wrangling bells had ended,<br />
+ Slowly struck the clock eleven,<br />
+ And, from out the silent heaven,<br />
+ Silence on the town descended.<br />
+ Silence, silence everywhere,<br />
+ On the earth and in the air,<br />
+ Save that footsteps here and there<br />
+ Of some burgher home returning,<br />
+ By the street lamps faintly burning,<br />
+ For a moment woke the echoes<br />
+ Of the ancient town of Bruges.'
+</p>
+
+<p><a name="ill8"></a></p>
+<table class="center" style="width: 752px;">
+<tr><td>
+ <img src="images/fig008.jpg" width="752" height="553" alt="Fig. 8">
+</td></tr>
+<tr><td>BRUGES.<br />Quai des Marbriers.</td></tr>
+</table>
+
+<p class="chapter">
+<a name="page_43"><span class="page">Page 43</span></a> THE BRUGES
+MATINS&mdash;BATTLE OF THE GOLDEN SPURS</p>
+
+<h2><a name="page_45"><span class="page">Page 45</span></a>
+CHAPTER IV</h2>
+
+<p class="subtitle">
+THE BRUGES MATINS&mdash;BATTLE OF THE GOLDEN SPURS
+</p>
+
+<p class="indent">
+The visitor to Bruges is reminded, wherever he goes, of the stirring
+events which fill the chronicles of the town for several centuries.
+Opposite the Belfry, in the middle of the Market-Place, is the
+monument to Peter De Coninck and John Breidel, on which garlands
+of flowers are laid every summer, in memory of what they did when
+the burghers rose against the French in May, 1302; and amongst
+the modern frescoes which cover the walls of the Grande Salle des
+&Eacute;chevins in the H&ocirc;tel de Ville, with its roof of
+fourteenth-century woodwork, is one which represents the return
+from the Battle of the Golden Spurs, that famous fight in which
+the hardy peasantry of Flanders overthrew the knights of France
+whom Philip the Fair had sent to avenge the blood of the Frenchmen
+who had died on the terrible morning of the 'Bruges Matins.'
+</p>
+
+<p class="indent">
+The fourteenth century had opened. The town <a name="page_46"><span
+class="page">Page 46</span></a> had now reached the limits which
+have contained it ever since&mdash;an irregular oval with a
+circumference of between four and five miles, surrounded by double
+ditches, and a strong wall pierced by nine fortified gateways;
+and as the town had grown, the privileges and liberties of the
+townsmen had grown likewise. Sturdy, independent, and resolved
+to keep the management of their own affairs in their own hands,
+the burghers of Bruges, like those of the other Flemish towns, had
+succeeded in establishing a system of self-government so complete
+that it roused the opposition of Guy de Dampierre, Count of Flanders,
+whose efforts to diminish the power of these communities at length
+brought about a crisis which gave Philip the Fair of France an
+excuse for interfering. The Count, having to contend both against
+his own subjects and against the ambitions of the King of France,
+fell from power, and in the end Flanders was annexed to France.
+</p>
+
+<p class="indent">
+Soon after this rich province had been added to his domains, Philip
+came with his wife, Joanna of Navarre, on a visit to Bruges. Already
+there were two factions in the town&mdash;the Leliarts, or French
+party, consisting chiefly of the upper classes, and the Clauwerts,
+or Flemish party, to which the mass of the people belonged. By
+the former Philip was <a name="page_47"><span class="page">Page
+47</span></a> received in royal fashion, and so magnificent were
+the dresses and jewels worn by the wives and daughters of the nobles
+and rich burgesses, who sat in the windows and balconies as the
+royal procession passed along, that the Queen was moved to jealousy.
+'I thought,' she said, 'that I alone was Queen; but here in this
+place I have six hundred rivals.' But in the streets below there
+were sullen looks and murmurs of discontent, which grew louder
+and louder every day, when, after the departure of the Court, the
+magistrates, who belonged to the French party, proposed that the
+merchant guilds should find money to defray some of the expenses
+which had been incurred on this occasion.
+</p>
+
+<p class="indent">
+At this time Peter De Coninck was Dean of the Guild of Weavers,
+a man of substance, popular and eloquent. There was a tumultuous
+gathering in the Market-Place, when, standing in front of the Belfry,
+with the leaders of five-and-twenty guilds around him, he declaimed on
+liberty, and attacked the magistrates, calling on his fellow-townsmen
+to resist the taxes. The city officers, on the order of the magistrates,
+arrested De Coninck and his chief supporters, and hurried them
+to the prison in the Bourg. But in a few hours the mob forced an
+<a name="page_48"><span class="page">Page 48</span></a> entrance
+and released them. The signal for revolt had been given, and for
+some months Bruges, like the rest of Flanders, was in disorder. De
+Coninck, who had been joined by John Breidel, Dean of the Guild of
+Butchers, was busy rousing the people in all parts of the country.
+He visited Ghent, amongst other places, and tried to persuade the
+magistrates that if Ghent and Bruges united their forces the whole
+Flemish people would rise, crush the Leliarts, and expel the French.
+But the men of Ghent would not listen to him, and he returned to
+Bruges. Here, too, he met with a rebuff, for the magistrates, having
+heard that Jacques de Ch&acirc;tillon, whom Philip had made Governor
+of Flanders, was marching on the town, would not allow him to remain
+amongst them. He went to Damme, and with him went, not only Breidel,
+but 5,000 burghers of the national party, stout Clauwerts, who had
+devoted themselves to regaining the liberty of their country.
+</p>
+
+<p><a name="ill9"></a></p>
+<table class="center" style="width: 559px;">
+<tr><td>
+ <img src="images/fig009.jpg" width="559" height="750" alt="Fig. 9">
+</td></tr>
+<tr><td>A FLEMISH YOUNG WOMAN</td></tr>
+</table>
+
+<p class="indent">
+When Ch&acirc;tillon rode up to the walls of Bruges and demanded
+entrance the magistrates agreed to open the gates, on condition
+that he brought with him only 300 men-at-arms. But he broke his
+word, and the town was entered by 2,000 knights, whose haughty looks
+and threatening language <a name="page_49"><span class="page">Page
+49</span></a> convinced the people that treachery was intended. It
+was whispered in the Market-Place that the waggons which rumbled
+over the drawbridges carried ropes with which the Clauwerts who
+had remained in the town were to be hanged; that there was to be
+a general massacre, in which not even the women and children would
+be spared; and that the Frenchmen never unbuckled their swords
+or took off their armour, but were ready to begin the slaughter
+at any moment. It was a day of terror in Bruges, and when evening
+came some of the burghers slipped out, made their way to Damme,
+and told De Coninck what was passing in the town.
+</p>
+
+<p class="indent">
+That night Ch&acirc;tillon gave a feast to his chief officers,
+and amongst his guests was Pierre Flotte, Chancellor of France,
+perhaps the ablest of those jurists by whose evil councils Philip
+the Fair was encouraged in the ideas of autocracy which led him to
+make the setting up of a despotism the policy of his whole life.
+With Flotte&mdash;'that Belial,' as Pope Boniface VIII. once called
+him&mdash;and the rest, Ch&acirc;tillon sat revelling till a late
+hour. The night wore on; De Ch&acirc;tillon's party broke up, and
+went to rest; the weary sentinels were half asleep at their posts; and
+soon all Bruges was buried in silence. Here and there lights twinkled
+in some <a name="page_50"><span class="page">Page 50</span></a>
+of the guild-houses, where a few of the burghers sat anxiously
+waiting for what the morrow might bring forth, while others went
+to the ramparts on the north, and strained their eyes to see if
+help was coming from Damme.
+</p>
+
+<p class="indent">
+At early dawn&mdash;it was Friday, May 18, 1302&mdash;the watchers
+on the ramparts saw a host of armed men rapidly approaching the
+town. They were divided into two parties, one of which, led by
+De Coninck, made for the Porte Ste. Croix, while the other, under
+Breidel, marched to the Porte de Damme, a gateway which no longer
+exists, but which was then one of the most important entrances,
+being that by which travellers came from Damme and Sluis. Messengers
+from the ramparts ran swiftly through the streets, in which daylight
+was now beginning to appear, and spread the news from house to
+house. Silently the burghers took their swords and pikes, left
+their homes, and gathered in the Market-Place and near the houses
+in which the French were sleeping. The French slept on till, all
+of a sudden, they were wakened by the tramp of feet, the clash
+of arms, and shouts of 'Flanders for the Lion!' Breidel had led
+his men into the town, and they were rushing through the streets
+to where Ch&acirc;tillon had taken up his <a name="page_51"><span
+class="page">Page 51</span></a> quarters, while De Coninck, having
+passed through the Porte Ste. Croix, was marching to the Bourg.
+The Frenchmen, bewildered, surprised, and only half awake, ran out
+into the streets. The Flemings were shouting 'Schilt ende Vriendt!
+Schilt ende Vriendt!'[*] and every man who could not pronounce
+these words was known to be a Frenchman, and slain upon the spot.
+Some fled to the gates; but at every gate they found a band of
+guards, who called out 'Schilt ende Vriendt!' and put them to the
+sword.
+</p>
+
+<p class="footnote">
+[Footnote *: 'Shield and Friend!']
+</p>
+
+<p class="indent">
+All that summer's morning, and on throughout the day, the massacre
+continued. Old men, women, and children hurled stones from the
+roofs and windows down upon the enemy. Breidel, a man of great
+strength, killed many with his own hand, and those whom he wounded
+were beaten to death where they fell by the apprentices with their
+iron clubs. In the Market-Place, close to where the monument to De
+Coninck and Breidel stands, a party of soldiers, under a gallant
+French knight, Gauthier de Sapignies, made a stand; but they were
+overpowered and slaughtered to the last man. Ch&acirc;tillon tried
+to rally his forces, but the surprise had been too complete, and,
+disguising himself in <a name="page_52"><span class="page">Page
+52</span></a> the cassock of a priest, he hid, in company with
+Chancellor Flotte, till it was dark, when they managed to escape
+from the town. By this time the carnage had ceased; the walls of
+the houses and the gutters ran with blood; and the burghers of
+Bruges had done their work so thoroughly that 2,000 Frenchmen lay
+dead upon the streets.
+</p>
+
+<p class="indent">
+But the final reckoning with France was yet to come. Then
+Ch&acirc;tillon reached Paris and told his master the direful story
+of the Bruges Matins, Philip swore revenge; and a few weeks later
+an army 40,000 strong invaded Flanders, under the Comte d'Artois,
+with whom rode also Ch&acirc;tillon, Flotte, and many nobles of
+France. The Flemings went to meet them&mdash;not only the burghers
+of Bruges, led by De Coninck and Breidel, marching under the banners
+of their guilds, but men from every part of Flanders&mdash;and on
+July 11, near Courtrai, the Battle of the Golden Spurs was fought.
+</p>
+
+<p><a name="ill10"></a></p>
+<table class="center" style="width: 567px;">
+<tr><td>
+ <img src="images/fig010.jpg" width="567" height="726" alt="Fig. 10">
+</td></tr>
+<tr><td>A FLEMISH BURGHER</td></tr>
+</table>
+
+<p class="indent">
+The ground was marshy, with a stream and pools of water between
+the two armies; and just as the Scots at Bannockburn, twelve years
+afterwards, prepared pitfalls for the heavy cavalry of England, so
+the Flemings laid a trap for the French knights by cutting down
+brushwood and covering the <a name="page_53"><span class="page">Page
+53</span></a> water. The horsemen, clad in cumbrous armour, charged,
+the brushwood gave way, and most of them sank into the water. The
+Comte d'Artois got clear, but was beaten to the ground and killed.
+The Chancellor Flotte, who had boasted that he would bring the people
+of Bruges to their knees, was trampled to death. Ch&acirc;tillon
+died too; and when, at last, a long day's fighting came to an end,
+the Flemings had gained a complete victory. By this battle, which
+took its name from the thousands of golden spurs which were torn
+from the French knights who fell, the victors secured&mdash;for a
+time, at least&mdash;the liberty of their country, and the memory
+of it was for many a day to Flanders what the memory of Bannockburn
+was to Scotland, or of Morgarten to Switzerland.
+</p>
+
+<p class="chapter">
+<a name="page_55"><span class="page">Page 55</span></a> DAMME&mdash;THE
+SEA-FIGHT AT SLUIS&mdash;SPLENDOUR OF BRUGES IN THE MIDDLE
+AGES&mdash;THE FALL AND LOSS OF TRADE</p>
+
+<h2><a name="page_57"><span class="page">Page 57</span></a>
+CHAPTER V</h2>
+
+<p class="subtitle">
+DAMME&mdash;THE SEA-FIGHT AT SLUIS&mdash;SPLENDOUR OF BRUGES IN
+THE MIDDLE AGES&mdash;THE FALL AND LOSS OF TRADE
+</p>
+
+<p class="indent">
+Damme, where the patriots mustered on the eve of the Bruges Matins,
+is within a short hour's stroll from the east end of the town.
+The Roya, which disappears from view, as we have already seen,
+opposite the Quai du Rosaire, emerges from its hidden course at
+the west end of the Quai du Miroir, where the statue of Jan van
+Eyck stands near the door of the building now used as a public
+library. This building was once the Customs House of Bruges,
+conveniently situated in the neighbourhood of the Market-Place, and
+on the side of the Roya, which thence stretches eastwards between
+the Quai du Miroir and the Quai Spinola for a few hundred yards,
+and then turns sharply to the north, and continues between the Quai
+Long and the Quai de la Potterie, which are built in rambling fashion
+on either side of the water. Some of the <a name="page_58"><span
+class="page">Page 58</span></a> houses are old, others of no earlier
+date, apparently, than the seventeenth or eighteenth centuries; some
+large and well preserved, and some mere cottages, half ruinous,
+with low gables and faded yellow fronts, huddled together on the
+rough causeway, alongside of which are moored canal-boats with
+brown hulls and deck-houses gay with white and green paint. At the
+end of the Quai de la Potterie is the modern Bassin de Commerce,
+in which the Roya loses itself, the harbour for the barges and small
+steamers which come by the canal connecting Ostend with Bruges
+and Ghent; and near this was, in ancient days, the Porte de Damme,
+through which Breidel and his followers burst on that fateful morning
+in May 600 years ago.
+</p>
+
+<p class="indent">
+To the right of the Bassin a broad canal, constructed by Napoleon
+in 1810, extends in a straight line eastwards, contained within dykes
+which raise it above a wide expanse of level meadow-lands intersected
+by ditches, and dotted here and there by the white-walled cottages
+with red roofs and green outside shutters which are so typical of
+Flemish scenery. About two miles out of Bruges one comes in sight
+of a windmill perched on a slope at the side of the canal, a square
+church-tower, a few houses, and some grassy mounds, which were once
+strong <a name="page_59"><span class="page">Page 59</span></a>
+fortifications. Even the historical imagination, which everyone
+who walks round Bruges must carry with him, is hardly equal to
+realizing that this was once a bustling seaport, with a harbour
+in which more than a hundred merchant ships, laden with produce
+from all parts of the world, were sometimes lying at the same time.
+In those busy times Damme, they say, contained 50,000 inhabitants;
+now there are only about 1,100.
+</p>
+
+<p class="indent">
+Beyond Damme the canal winds on through the same flat landscape,
+low-lying, water-logged, with small farmhouses and scanty trees, and
+in the distance, on the few patches of higher ground, the churches
+of Oostkerke and Westcapelle. At last, soon after passing the Dutch
+frontier, the canal ends in a little dock with gray, lichen-covered
+sides; and this is Sluis, a dull place, with a few narrow streets, a
+market-place, two churches, and a belfry of the fourteenth century.
+It is quite inland now, miles from the salt water; and from the
+high ramparts which still surround it the view extends to the north
+across broad green fields, covering what was once the bed of the sea,
+in the days when the tide ebbed and flowed in the channel of the
+Zwijn, over which ships passed sailing on their way to Bruges. But
+any English traveller who, <a name="page_60"><span class="page">Page
+60</span></a> having gone a little way out of the beaten track
+of summer tourists, may chance to mount the ramparts, and look
+down upon the fields which stretch away to the shores of the North
+Sea and the estuary of the Scheldt, and inland beyond Damme to
+the Belfry and the spires of Bruges, is gazing on the scene of a
+great event in the naval history of England.
+</p>
+
+<p class="indent">
+Here, on what is now dry land, on the morning of June 24, 1340,
+800 ships of war, full of armed men&mdash;35,000 of them&mdash;were
+drawn up in line of battle; and further out to sea, beyond the
+entrance of the Zwijn, the newly-risen sun was shining on the sails
+of another fleet which was man&oelig;uvring in the offing.
+</p>
+
+<p><a name="ill11"></a></p>
+<table class="center" style="width: 550px;">
+<tr><td>
+ <img src="images/fig011.jpg" width="550" height="728" alt="Fig. 11">
+</td></tr>
+<tr><td>BRUGES.<br />Qua du Miroir.</td></tr>
+</table>
+
+<p class="indent">
+'In the cities of Flanders,' says Dr. Gardiner, 'had arisen
+manufacturing populations which supplied the countries round with
+the products of the loom. To the Ghent and Bruges of the Middle
+Ages England stood in the same relation as that which the Australian
+colonies hold to the Leeds and Bradford of our own day. The sheep
+which grazed over the wide, unenclosed pasture-lands of our island
+formed a great part of the wealth of England, and that wealth depended
+entirely on the flourishing trade with the Flemish towns in <a
+name="page_61"><span class="page">Page 61</span></a> which English
+wool was converted into cloth.' When, therefore, Edward III. claimed
+the throne of France, and the Hundred Years' War began, it was of
+vital importance to the trade of Flanders and England that the
+merchants of the two countries should maintain friendly relations
+with each other. But Philip of Valois had persuaded the Count of
+Flanders, Louis de Nevers, to order the arrest of all the English
+in Flanders, and Edward had retaliated by arresting all the Flemings
+who were in England, and forbidding the export of English wool
+to Flanders. The result was that the weavers of Bruges and the
+other manufacturing towns of Flanders found themselves on the road
+to ruin; and, having no interest in the question at issue between
+the Kings of France and England, apart from its effect on their
+commercial prosperity, the burghers of Bruges, Ghent, and Ypres,
+under the leadership of the famous Jacob van Artevelde (anticipating,
+as one of the modern historians of Bruges has noticed, what the
+Great Powers did for Belgium in 1830[*]), succeeded in securing,
+with the assent of Philip, the neutrality of Flanders. The French
+King, however, did not keep faith with the Flemings, but proceeded
+to acts of aggression <a name="page_62"><span class="page">Page
+62</span></a> against them, and a league against France was formed
+between England and Flanders.
+</p>
+
+<p class="footnote">
+[Footnote *: Robinson, <i>Bruges, an Historical Sketch</i>, p. 107.]
+</p>
+
+<p class="indent">
+In June, 1340, Edward, who was then in England, hearing that an
+immense number of French ships of war were at anchor in the Zwijn,
+set sail to give them battle with a squadron of 300 vessels. The
+English fleet anchored off the coast between Blankenberghe and
+Heyst on the evening of June 23, and from the top of the dunes the
+English scouts saw in the distance the masts of the French ships
+in the Zwijn.
+</p>
+
+<p class="indent">
+As soon as there was light next morning, the English weighed anchor
+and sailed along the coast to the east; past lonely yellow sands,
+which have swarmed during recent years with workmen toiling at the
+construction of the immense harbour of See-Brugge, which is to
+be the future port of Bruges; past what was then the small fishing
+hamlet of Heyst; past a range of barren dunes, amongst which to-day
+Duinbergen, the latest of the Flemish watering-places, with its
+spacious hotel and trim villas, is being laid out; past a waste of
+storm-swept sand and rushes, on which are now the digue of Knocke,
+a cluster of hotels and crowded lodging-houses, and a golf-course;
+and so onwards till they opened the mouth of the Zwijn, and saw the
+French ships <a name="page_63"><span class="page">Page 63</span></a>
+crowding the entrance, 'their masts appearing to be like a great
+wood,' and beyond them the walls of Sluis rising from the wet sands
+left by the receding tide.
+</p>
+
+<p class="indent">
+It was low-water, and while waiting for the turn of the tide the
+English fleet stood out to sea for some time, so that Nicholas
+B&eacute;huchet, the French Admiral, began to flatter himself that
+King Edward, finding himself so completely outnumbered, would not
+dare to risk fighting against such odds. The odds, indeed, were
+nearly three to one against the English seamen; but as soon as
+the tide began to flow they steered straight into the channel,
+and, Edward leading the van, came to close quarters, ship to ship.
+The famous archers of England, who six years later were to do such
+execution at Crecy, lined the bulwarks, and poured in a tempest of
+arrows so thick that men fell from the tops of the French ships
+like leaves before a storm. The first of the four lines in which
+B&eacute;huchet had drawn up his fleet was speedily broken, and
+the English, brandishing their swords and pikes, boarded the French
+ships, drove their crews overboard, and hoisted the flag of England.
+King Edward was wounded, and the issue may have been doubtful, when
+suddenly more ships, coming from the North <a name="page_64"><span
+class="page">Page 64</span></a> of England, appeared in sight, and
+hordes of Flemings from all parts of Flanders, from the coast,
+and even from inland towns so far away as Ypres,[*] came swarming
+in boats to join in the attack. This decided the fate of the great
+battle, which continued till sunset. When it ended, the French
+fleet had ceased to exist, with the exception of a few ships which
+escaped when it was dark. The Flemings captured B&eacute;huchet,
+and hung him then and there. Nearly 30,000 of his men perished,
+many of whom were drowned while attempting to swim ashore, or were
+clubbed to death by the Flemings who lined the beach, waiting to
+take vengeance on the invaders for having burned their homesteads
+and carried off their flocks. The English lost two ships and 4,000
+men; but the victory was so complete that no courtier was bold
+enough to carry the news to King Philip, who did not know what
+had befallen his great fleet till the Court jester went to him,
+and said, 'Oh! the English cowards! the English cowards! They had
+not the courage to jump into the sea as our noble Frenchmen did
+at Sluis.'
+</p>
+
+<p class="footnote">
+[Footnote *: Vereecke, <i>Histoire Militaire de la Ville d'Ypres</i>,
+p. 36.]
+</p>
+
+<p class="indent">
+It is strange to think that Flemish peasants work, and cattle feed,
+and holiday visitors from <a name="page_65"><span class="page">Page
+65</span></a> Knocke, or Sluis, or Kadzand ramble about dry-shod
+where the waves were rolling in on that midsummer's morning, and
+that far beneath the grass the timbers of so many stout ships and
+the bones of so many valiant seamen have long since mouldered away.
+And it is also strange to think, when wandering along the canals
+of Bruges, where now the swans glide silently about in the almost
+stagnant water which laps the basements of the old houses, how in
+the fourteenth and fifteenth centuries ships of every nation carried
+in great bales of merchandise, and that rich traders stored them in
+warehouses and strong vaults, which are now mere coal-cellars, or
+the dark and empty haunts of the rats which swarm in the canals.
+</p>
+
+<p class="indent">
+'There is,' says Mr. Robinson, 'in the National Library at Paris a
+list of the kingdoms and cities which sent their produce to Bruges
+at that time. England sent wool, lead, tin, coal, and cheese; Ireland
+and Scotland, chiefly hides and wool; Denmark, pigs; Russia, Hungary,
+and Bohemia, large quantities of wax; Poland, gold and silver;
+Germany, wine; Li&eacute;ge, copper kettles; and Bulgaria, furs.'
+After naming many parts of Europe, Asia, and Africa, that sent
+goods, the manuscript adds: 'And all the aforesaid realms and regions
+<a name="page_66"><span class="page">Page 66</span></a> send their
+merchants with wares to Flanders, besides those who come from France,
+Poitou, and Gascony, and from the three islands of which we know
+not the names of their kingdoms.' The trade of Bruges was enormous.
+People flocked there from all quarters.
+</p>
+
+<p class="bquote">
+'Lombard and Venetian merchants with deep-laden argosies;<br />
+Ministers from twenty nations; more than royal pomp and ease.'
+</p>
+
+<p class="indent">
+We read of 150 ships entering in one day, and of German merchants
+buying 2,600 pieces of cloth, made by Flemish weavers, in a morning's
+marketing. A citizen of Bruges was always at the head of the Hanseatic
+League, and maintained the rights of that vast commercial society
+under the title of 'Comte de la Hanse.' Merchant princes, members
+of the Hanse, lived here in palaces. Money-changers grew rich.
+Edward III. borrowed from the Bardi at Bruges on the security of
+the Crown jewels of England. Contracts of insurance against maritime
+risks were entered into from an early period, and the merchant
+shipping code which regulated traffic by sea was known as the
+'R&ouml;les de Damme.'[*] There were twenty consulates at <a
+name="page_67"><span class="page">Page 67</span></a> one time in
+Bruges, and the population of the town is said, though it is difficult
+to believe that this is not an exaggeration, to have been more than
+200,000 before the middle of the fourteenth century.
+</p>
+
+<p class="footnote">
+[Footnote *: Gilliodts van Severen, <i>Bruges Ancienne et Moderne</i>,
+p. 14.]
+</p>
+
+<p class="indent">
+Six years after the Battle of Sluis, Louis of Nevers was killed at
+Crecy, and his son, Louis of Maele, reigned in his stead as Count
+of Flanders. He was a Leliart to the core, and his reign of nearly
+forty years, one long struggle against the liberties of his people,
+witnessed the capture of Bruges by Philip van Artevelde, the invasion
+of Flanders by the French, the defeat of the Nationalists, and the
+death of Van Artevelde on the field of Roosebeke. Nevertheless,
+during this period and after it Bruges grew in beauty and in wealth.
+The H&ocirc;tel de Ville, without the grandeur of the H&ocirc;tel de
+Ville at Brussels, but still a gem of medi&aelig;val architecture,
+was built on the site of the old 'Ghiselhuis' of Baldwin Bras-de-Fer.
+Other noble buildings, rich in design and beautiful in all their
+outlines, and great mansions, with marble halls and ceilings of
+exquisitely carved woodwork, rose on every side; towers and pinnacles,
+shapely windows and graceful arches, overhung the waterways; luxury
+increased; in the homes of the nobles and wealthy merchants were
+stores of <a name="page_68"><span class="page">Page 68</span></a>
+precious stones, tapestries, silk, fine linen, cloth of gold; the
+churches and many buildings gleamed with gilded stone and tinted
+glass and brilliant frescoes. Art flourished as the town grew richer.
+The elder and the younger Van Eyck, Gerard David, and Memlinc, with
+many others before and after them, were attracted by its splendour,
+as modern painters have been attracted by its decay; and though the
+'Adoration of the Immaculate Lamb' hangs in the choir of St. Bavon
+at Ghent, the genius which coloured that matchless altar-piece
+found its inspiration within the walls of Bruges.
+</p>
+
+<p class="indent">
+The history of Bruges for many long years, especially under the
+rule of the House of Burgundy, was, in the midst of war, turmoil,
+and rebellion, the history of continuous progress. But all this
+prosperity depended on the sea. So long as the Zwijn remained open,
+neither war nor faction, not even the last great rising against the
+Archduke Maximilian, which drove away the foreign merchants, most
+of whom went to Antwerp, and so impoverished the town that no less
+than 5,000 houses were standing empty in the year 1405,[*] could have
+entirely ruined Bruges. These disasters might have been retrieved
+if the <a name="page_69"><span class="page">Page 69</span></a>
+channel of communication with Damme and Sluis had not been lost;
+but for a long time the condition of this important waterway had
+been the cause of grave anxiety to the people of Bruges. The heavy
+volume of water which poured with every ebbing tide down the Scheldt
+between Flushing and Breskens swept past the island of Walcheren,
+and spread out into the North Sea and down the English Channel,
+leaving the mud it carried with it on the sands round the mouth of
+the Zwijn, which itself did not discharge a current strong enough
+to prevent the slow but sure formation of a bank across its entrance.
+Charters, moreover, had been granted to various persons, under
+which they drained the adjoining lands, and gradually reclaimed
+large portions from the sea. The channel, at no time very deep,
+became shallower, narrower, and more difficult of access, until at
+last, during the second half of the fifteenth century, the passage
+between Sluis and Damme was navigable only by small ships. Soon
+the harbour at Damme was nearly choked up with sand. Many schemes
+were tried in the hope of preserving the Zwijn, but the sea-trade
+of Bruges dwindled away to a mere nothing, and finally disappeared
+before the middle of the sixteenth century.
+</p>
+
+<p class="footnote">
+[Footnote *: Gilliodts van Severen, p. 25.]
+</p>
+
+<p class="indent">
+<a name="page_70"><span class="page">Page 70</span></a> And so
+Bruges fell from greatness. There are still some traces of the
+ancient bed of the Zwijn amongst the fields near Coolkerke, a village
+a short distance to the north of Bruges&mdash;a broad ditch with
+broken banks, and large pools of slimy water lying desolate and
+forlorn in a wilderness of tangled bushes. These are now the only
+remains of the highway by which the 'deep-laden argosies' used
+to enter in the days of old.
+</p>
+
+<p class="chapter">
+<a name="page_71"><span class="page">Page 71</span></a>
+'BRUGES LA MORTE'</p>
+
+<h2><a name="page_73"><span class="page">Page 73</span></a>
+CHAPTER VI</h2>
+
+<p class="subtitle">'BRUGES LA MORTE'</p>
+
+<p class="indent">
+They call it 'Bruges la Morte,' and at every turn there is something
+to remind us of the deadly blight which fell upon the city when
+its trade was lost. The faded colours, the timeworn brickwork, the
+indescribable look of decay which, even on the brightest morning,
+throws a shade of melancholy over the whole place, lead one to
+think of some aged dame, who has 'come down in the world,' wearing
+out the finery of better days. It is all very sad and pathetic,
+but strangely beautiful, and the painter never lived who could
+put on canvas the mellow tints with which Time has clothed these
+old walls, and thus veiled with tender hand the havoc it has made.
+To stand on the bridge which crosses the canal at the corner of
+the Quai des Marbriers and the Quai Vert, where the pinnacles of
+the Palais du Franc and the roof of the H&ocirc;tel de Ville, with
+the Belfry just showing above them, and dull red walls rising from
+the water, make up <a name="page_74"><span class="page">Page
+74</span></a> a unique picture of still-life, is to read a sermon
+in stones, an impressive lesson in history.
+</p>
+
+<p class="indent">
+The loss of trade brought Bruges face to face with the 'question
+of the unemployed' in a very aggravated form. How to provide for
+the poor became a most serious problem, and so many of the people
+were reduced to living on charity that almshouses sprang up all
+over the town. God's Houses ('Godshuisen') they called them, and
+call them still. They are to be found in all directions&mdash;quaint
+little places, planted down here and there, each with a small chapel
+of its own, with moss-grown roofs and dingy walls, and doors that
+open on to the uneven cobbles. Every stone of them spells pauperism.
+The Church does much towards maintaining these shelters for the
+poor&mdash;perhaps too much, if it is true that there are 10,000
+paupers in Bruges out of a population of about 55,000. There is
+a great deal of begging in the streets, and a sad lack of sturdy
+self-respect amongst the lower class, which many think is caused by
+the system of doles, for which the Church is chiefly responsible.
+Bruges might not have been so picturesque to-day if her commerce
+had survived; but the beauty of a town is dearly purchased at the
+cost of such degradation and loss of personal independence.
+</p>
+
+<p><a name="ill12"></a></p>
+<table class="center" style="width: 734px;">
+<tr><td>
+ <img src="images/fig012.jpg" width="734" height="561" alt="Fig. 12">
+</td></tr>
+<tr><td>BRUGES.<br />View of the Palais du Franc.</td></tr>
+</table>
+
+<p class="indent">
+<a name="page_75"><span class="page">Page 75</span></a> It was
+not only the working class which suffered. Many rich families sank
+into poverty, and their homes, some of which were more like palaces
+than private houses, had to be dismantled. The fate of one of these
+lordly mansions is connected with an episode which carries us back
+into the social life of Bruges in the middle of the seventeenth
+century. On the right side of the Rue Haute, as one goes from the
+Place du Bourg, there is a high block containing two large houses,
+Nos. 6 and 8, of that street. It is now a big, plain building without
+a trace of architectural distinction; but in the seventeenth century
+it was a single mansion, built about the year 1320, and was one
+of the many houses with towers which gave the Bruges of that time
+almost the appearance of an Oriental city. It was called the House
+of the Seven Towers, from the seven pinnacles which surmounted
+it; and at the back there was a large garden, which extended to
+the canal and Quai des Marbriers.
+</p>
+
+<p class="indent">
+In April, 1656, the 'tall man above two yards high, with dark brown
+hair, scarcely to be distinguished from black,' for whom the Roundheads
+had searched all England after the Battle of Worcester, found his
+way to Bruges, with his brother Henry, Duke of Gloucester, and the
+train of Royalists who <a name="page_76"><span class="page">Page
+76</span></a> formed their Court. For nearly three years after
+Worcester, Charles II. had lived in France; but in July, 1654,
+the alliance between Cromwell and Mazarin drove him to Germany,
+where he remained till Don John of Austria became Governor of the
+Spanish Netherlands. Thereupon the prospect of recovering the English
+throne by the assistance of Spain led him to remove his Court,
+which had been established for some time at Cologne, to Flanders.
+He arrived at Bruges on April 22, 1656. His brother James, Duke
+of York, and afterwards King of England, held a commission in the
+French army, and Mazarin offered him a command in Italy. Charles,
+however, requested him to leave the French army, and enter the
+service of Spain. At first James refused; but by the mediation
+of their sister, the Princess of Orange, he was persuaded to do
+as his brother wished, and join the Court at Bruges. The Irish
+Viscount Tarah received Charles, when he first arrived, in his house
+in the Rue du Vieux Bourg, and there gave him, we read in local
+history, 'une brillante hospitalit&eacute;.' But in the beginning
+of June the Court took up its quarters in the House of the Seven
+Towers.
+</p>
+
+<p class="indent">
+During his sojourn in Flanders, Charles was carefully watched by
+the secret service officers of the <a name="page_77"><span
+class="page">Page 77</span></a> Commonwealth Government, who sent
+home reports of all he did. These reports, many of which are in the
+Thurloe State Papers and other collections, contain some curious
+details about the exiled Court.
+</p>
+
+<p class="indent">
+There never was a more interesting 'English colony' at Bruges than
+at that time. Hyde, who received the Great Seal at Bruges, was there
+with Ormonde and the Earls of Bristol, Norwich, and Rochester.
+Sir Edward Nicholas was Secretary of State; and we read of Colonel
+Sydenham, Sir Robert Murray, and 'Mr. Cairless', who sat on the
+tree with Charles Stewart after Worcester fight. Another of the
+exiles at Bruges was Sir James Turner, the soldier of fortune,
+who served under Gustavus Adolphus, persecuted the Covenanters
+in Scotland, and is usually supposed to have been the original of
+Dugald Dalgetty in Sir Walter Scott's <i>Legend of Montrose</i>.
+A list of the royal household is still preserved at Bruges. It
+was prepared in order that the town council might fix the daily
+allowance of wine and beer which was to be given to the Court,
+and contains the names of about sixty persons, with a note of the
+supply granted to each family.
+</p>
+
+<p class="indent">
+A 'Letter of Intelligence' (the report of a spy), <a
+name="page_78"><span class="page">Page 78</span></a> dated from
+Bruges on September 29, 1656, mentions that Lilly, the astrologer
+of London, had written to say that the King would be restored to the
+throne next year, and that all the English at Bruges were delighted.
+But in the meantime they were very hard up for ready money. Ever
+since leaving England Charles and his followers had suffered from
+the most direful impecuniosity. We find Hyde declaring that he has
+'neither shoes nor shirt.' The King himself was constantly running
+into debt for his meals, and his friends spent many a hungry day at
+Bruges. If by good luck they chanced to be in funds, one meal a day
+sufficed for a party of half a dozen courtiers. If it was cold they
+could not afford to purchase firewood. The Earl of Norwich writes,
+saying that he has to move about so as to get lodgings on credit,
+and avoid people to whom he owes money. Colonel Borthwick, who
+claims to have served the King most faithfully, complains that he
+is in prison at Bruges on suspicion of disloyalty, has not changed
+his clothes for three years, and is compelled by lack of cash to go
+without a fire in winter. Sir James Hamilton, a gentleman-in-waiting,
+gets drunk one day, and threatens to kill the Lord Chancellor. He is
+starving, and declares it is Hyde's fault that <a name="page_79"><span
+class="page">Page 79</span></a> the King gives him no money. He
+will put on a clean shirt to be hanged in, and not run away, being
+without so much as a penny. Then we have the petition of a poor
+fencing-master. 'Heaven,' he writes piteously, 'hears the groans
+of the lowest creatures, and therefore I trust that you, being a
+terrestrial deity, will not disdain my supplication.' He had come
+from Cologne to Bruges to teach the royal household, and wanted
+his wages, for he and his family were starving.
+</p>
+
+<p><a name="ill13"></a></p>
+<table class="center" style="width: 534px;">
+<tr><td>
+ <img src="images/fig013.jpg" width="534" height="768" alt="Fig. 13">
+</td></tr>
+<tr><td>BRUGES.<br />Maison du P&eacute;lican (Almshouse).</td></tr>
+</table>
+
+<p class="indent">
+Don John of Austria visited Charles at Bruges, and an allowance
+from the King of Spain was promised, so that men might be levied
+for the operations against Cromwell; but the payments were few
+and irregular. 'The English Court,' says a letter of February,
+1657, 'remains still at Bridges [Bruges], never in greater want,
+nor greater expectations of money, without which all their levies
+are like to be at a stand; for Englishmen cannot live on bread
+alone.'
+</p>
+
+<p class="indent">
+A 'Letter of Intelligence' sent from Sluis says that Charles is 'much
+loocked upon, but littell respeckted.' And this is not wonderful if
+the reports sent home by the Commonwealth agents are to be trusted.
+One of the spies who haunted the neighbourhood of Bruges was a Mr.
+Butler, <a name="page_80"><span class="page">Page 80</span></a>
+who writes in the winter of 1656-1657: 'This last week one of the
+richest churches in Bruges was plundered in the night. The people
+of Bruges are fully persuaded that Charles Stewart's followers
+have done it. They spare no pains to find out the guilty, and if
+it happen to light upon any of Charles Stewart's train, it will
+mightily incense that people against them.... There is now a company
+of French comedians at Bruges, who are very punctually attended
+by Charles Stewart and his Court, and all the ladies there. Their
+most solemn day of acting is the Lord's Day. I think I may truly
+say that greater abominations were never practised among people than
+at this day at Charles Stewart's Court. Fornication, drunkenness,
+and adultery are esteemed no sins amongst them; so I persuade myself
+God will never prosper any of their attempts.'[*] In another letter
+we read that once, after a hunting expedition, Charles and a gentleman
+of the bedchamber were the only two who came back sober. Sir James
+Turner was mad when drunk, 'and that was pretty often,' says Bishop
+Burnet.
+</p>
+
+<p class="footnote">
+[Footnote *: Letter from Mr. J. Butler, Flushing, December 2, 1656,
+Thurloe State Papers, V., 645.]
+</p>
+
+<p class="indent">
+But, of course, it was the business of the spies to <a
+name="page_81"><span class="page">Page 81</span></a> blacken the
+character of Charles; and there can be little doubt that, in spite
+of his poverty and loose morals, he was well liked by the citizens
+of Bruges, who, notwithstanding a great deal of outward decorum, have
+at no time been very strait-laced. 'Charles,' we learn from a local
+history, 'sut se rendre populaire en prenant part aux amusements de
+la population et en se pliant, sans effort comme sans affectation,
+aux usages du pays.' During his whole period of exile he contrived
+to amuse himself. Affairs of gallantry, dancing, tennis, billiards,
+and other frivolous pursuits, occupied as much of his attention
+as the grave affairs of State over which Hyde and Ormonde spent
+so many anxious hours. When on a visit to Brussels in the spring
+of 1657, he employed, we are told, most of his time with Don John
+dancing, or at 'long paume, a Spanish play with balls filled with
+wire.' And, again: 'He passes his time with shooting at Bruges,
+and such other obscure pastimes.'
+</p>
+
+<p class="indent">
+This 'shooting' was the favourite Flemish sport of shooting with
+bow and arrows at an artificial bird fixed on a high pole, the
+prize being, on great occasions, a golden bird, which was hung
+by a chain of gold round the winner's neck. In the records of the
+Guilds of St. George and St. Sebastian at <a name="page_82"><span
+class="page">Page 82</span></a> Bruges there are notices relating
+to Charles. The former was a society of cross-bowmen, the latter
+of archers. On June 11, 1656, Charles and the Duke of Gloucester
+were at the festival of the Society of St. George. Charles was
+the first to try his skill, and managed to hit the mark. After the
+Duke and many others had shot, Peter Pruyssenaere, a wine merchant
+in the Rue du Vieux Bourg, brought down the bird, and Charles hung
+the golden 'Bird of Honour' round his neck. On June 25 Charles
+visited the Society of St. Sebastian, when Michael No&eacute;,
+a gardener, was the winner. The King and Gloucester both became
+members of the St. Sebastian, which is still a flourishing society.
+Going along the Rue des Carmes, the traveller passes the English
+convent on the left, and on the right, at the end of the street,
+comes to the Guild-house of St. Sebastian, with its slender tower
+and quiet garden, one of the pleasantest spots in Bruges. There
+the names of Charles and his brother are to be seen inscribed in
+a small volume bound in red morocco, the 'Bird of Honour' with its
+chain of gold, a silver arrow presented by the Duke of Gloucester,
+and some other interesting relics. On September 15, 1843, Queen
+Victoria, Prince Albert, King Leopold I., and the Queen of the
+Belgians, <a name="page_83"><span class="page">Page 83</span></a>
+went to the Rue des Carmes and signed their names as members of
+this society, which now possesses two silver cups, presented by
+the Queen of England in 1845 and 1893. The Duke of York seems to
+have been successful as an archer, for in the H&ocirc;tel de Ville
+at Bruges there is a picture by John van Meuninxhove, in which
+Charles is seen hanging the 'Bird of Honour' round his brother's
+neck.
+</p>
+
+<p class="indent">
+In April, 1657, the English Government was informed that the Court
+of Charles was preparing to leave Bruges. 'Yesterday' (April 7)
+'some of his servants went before to Brussels to make ready lodgings
+for Charles Stewart, the Duke of York, and the Duke of Gloucester.
+All that have or can compass so much money go along with Charles
+Stewart on Monday morning. I do admire how people live here for
+want of money. Our number is not increased since my last. The most
+of them are begging again for want of money; and when any straggling
+persons come, we have not so much money as will take a single man
+to the quarters; yet we promise ourselves great matters.' They
+were hampered in all their movements by this want of hard cash,
+for Charles was in debt at Bruges, and could not remove his goods
+until he paid his <a name="page_84"><span class="page">Page
+84</span></a> creditors. It was sadly humiliating. 'The King,' we
+read, 'will hardly live at Bruges any more, but he cannot remove
+his family and goods till we get money.' The dilemma seems to have
+been settled by Charles, his brothers, and most of the Court going
+off to Brussels, leaving their possessions behind them. The final
+move did not take place till February, 1658, and Clarendon says
+that Charles never lived at Bruges after that date. He may, however,
+have returned on a short visit, for Jesse, in his <i>Memoirs of
+the Court Of England under the Stuarts</i>, states that the King
+was playing tennis at Bruges when Sir Stephen Fox came to him with
+the great news, 'The devil is dead!' This would be in September,
+1658, Cromwell having died on the third of that month. After the
+Restoration Charles sent to the citizens of Bruges a letter of
+thanks for the way in which they had received him. Nor did he forget,
+amidst the pleasures of the Court at Whitehall, the simple pastimes
+of the honest burghers, but presented to the archers of the Society
+of St. Sebastian the sum of 3,600 florins, which were expended on
+their hall of meeting.
+</p>
+
+<p class="indent">
+More than a hundred years later, when the Stuart dynasty was a thing
+of the past and George III. was seated on the throne of England,
+<a name="page_85"><span class="page">Page 85</span></a> the Rue
+Haute saw the arrival of some travellers who were very different
+from the roystering Cavaliers and frail beauties who had made it
+gay in the days of the Merry Monarch. The English Jesuits of St.
+Omer, when expelled from their college, came to Bruges in August,
+1762, and took up their abode in the House of the Seven Towers,
+where they found 'nothing but naked walls and empty chambers.' A
+miserable place it must have been. 'In one room a rough table of
+planks had been set up, and the famished travellers were rejoiced
+at the sight of three roast legs of mutton set on the primitive
+table. Knives, forks, and plates there were none. A Flemish servant
+divided the food with his pocket-knife. A farthing candle gave
+a Rembrandt-like effect to the scene. The boys slept that night
+on mattresses laid on the floor of one of the big empty rooms of
+the house. The first days at Bruges were cheerless enough.'[*]
+The religious houses, however, came to the rescue. Flemish monks
+and the nuns of the English convent helped the pilgrims, and the
+Jesuits soon established themselves at Bruges, where they remained
+in peace for a few years, till the Austrian Government drove them
+out. The same fate overtook <a name="page_86"><span class="page">Page
+86</span></a> the inmates of many monasteries and convents at Bruges
+in the reign of Joseph II., whose reforming zeal led to that revolt
+of the Austrian Netherlands which was the prelude to the invasion
+of Flanders by the army of the French Revolution.
+</p>
+
+<p class="footnote">
+[Footnote *: Robinson, <i>Bruges, an Historical Sketch</i>, p. 291.]
+</p>
+
+<p class="indent">
+After the conquest of Belgium by the French it looked as if all
+the churches in Bruges were doomed. The Chapel of St. Basil was
+laid in ruins. The Church of St. Donatian, which had stood since
+the days of Baldwin Bras-de-Fer, was pulled down and disappeared
+entirely. Notre Dame, St. Sauveur, and other places of worship,
+narrowly escaped destruction; and it was not till the middle of
+the nineteenth century that the town recovered, in some measure,
+from these disasters.
+</p>
+
+<p class="indent">
+Bruges has doubtless shared in the general prosperity which has
+spread over the country since Belgium became an independent kingdom
+after the revolution of 1830, but its progress has been slow. It
+has never lost its old-world associations; and the names of the
+streets and squares, and the traditions connected with numberless
+houses which a stranger might pass without notice, are all so many
+links with the past. There is the Rue Espagnole, for example, where
+a vegetable market is held every Wednesday. This was the quarter
+where the Spanish <a name="page_87"><span class="page">Page
+87</span></a> merchants lived and did their business. There used
+to be a tall, dark, and, in fact, very dirty-looking old house
+in this street known by the Spanish name of the 'Casa Negra.' It
+was pulled down a few years ago; but lower down, at the foot of
+the street, the great cellars in which the Spaniards stored their
+goods remain; and on the Quai Espagnol was the Spanish Consulate,
+now a large dwelling-house. A few steps from the Quai Espagnol is
+the Place des Orientaux (Oosterlingen Plaats), where a minaret of
+tawny brick rises above the gables of what was once the Consulate
+of Smyrna, and on the north side of which, in the brave days of
+old, stood the splendid Maison des Orientaux, the headquarters
+of the Hanseatic League in Bruges, the finest house in Flanders,
+with turrets and soaring spire, and marvellous fa&ccedil;ade, and
+rooms inside all ablaze with gilding. The glory has departed; two
+modern dwelling-houses have taken the place of this commercial
+palace; but it must surely be a very dull imagination on which
+the sight of this spot, now so tranquil and commonplace, but once
+the centre of such important transactions, makes no impression.
+From the Place des Orientaux it is only a few minutes' stroll to
+the Rue Cour de Gand and the dark brown wooden front of the <a
+name="page_88"><span class="page">Page 88</span></a> small house,
+now a lace shop, which tradition says was one of Memlinc's homes
+in Bruges, where we can fancy him, laboriously and with loving
+care, putting the last minute touches to some immortal painting.
+</p>
+
+<p class="indent">
+Then there is the Rue Anglaise, off the Quai Spinola, where the
+English Merchant Adventurers met to discuss their affairs in houses
+with such names as 'Old England' or 'The Tower of London.' The
+head of the colony, 'Governor of the English Nation beyond the
+Seas' they called him, was a very busy man 400 years ago.[*] The
+Scottish merchants were settled in the same district, close to
+the Church of Ste. Walburge. They called their house 'Scotland,'
+and doubtless made as good bargains as the 'auld enemy' in the
+next street. There is a building called the Parijssche Halle, or
+Halle de Paris, hidden away among the houses to the west of the
+Market-Place, with a caf&eacute; and a theatre where Flemish plays
+are acted now, which was formerly the Consulate of France; and
+subscription balls and amateur theatricals are given by the English
+residents of to-day in the fourteenth-century house of the Genoese
+merchants in the Rue Flamande. The list of streets and houses <a
+name="page_89"><span class="page">Page 89</span></a> with old-time
+associations like these might be extended indefinitely, for in
+Bruges the past is ever present.
+</p>
+
+<p class="footnote">
+[Footnote *: In the <i>Flandria Illustrata</i> of Sanderus, vol.
+i., p. 275, there is a picture of the 'Domus Anglorum.']
+</p>
+
+<p><a name="ill14"></a></p>
+<table class="center" style="width: 742px;">
+<tr><td>
+ <img src="images/fig014.jpg" width="742" height="583" alt="Fig. 14">
+</td></tr>
+<tr><td>BRUGES.<br />Vegetable Market.</td></tr>
+</table>
+
+<p class="indent">
+Even the flat-fronted, plain houses with which poverty or the bad
+taste of the last century replaced many of the older buildings
+do not spoil the picturesque appearance of the town as a whole,
+because it is no larger now than it was 600 years ago, and these
+modern structures are quite lost amongst their venerable neighbours.
+Thus Bruges retains its medi&aelig;val character. In the midst,
+however, of all this wealth of architectural beauty and historical
+interest, the atmosphere of common everyday life seems to be so
+very dull and depressing that people living there are apt to be
+driven, by sheer boredom, into spending their lives in a round of
+small excitements and incessant, wearisome gossip, and into taking
+far more interest in the paltry squabbles of their neighbours over some
+storm in a teacup than in the more important topics which invigorate
+the minds of men and women in healthier and broader societies.
+Long before Rodenbach's romance was written this peculiarity of
+Bruges was proverbial throughout Belgium.
+</p>
+
+<p class="indent">
+But it is possible that a change is at hand, and that Bruges may
+once again become, not the Venice <a name="page_90"><span
+class="page">Page 90</span></a> of the North&mdash;the time for that
+is past&mdash;but an important town, for the spirit of commercial
+enterprise which has done so much for other parts of Belgium during
+the last seventy-five years is now invading even this quiet place,
+whose citizens have begun to dream of recovering some portion of
+their former prosperity. In 1895 the Belgian Parliament passed a law
+providing for the construction, between Blankenberghe and Heyst, of
+a harbour connected with Bruges by a canal of large dimensions, and
+of an inner port at the town. The works at See-Brugge, as the outer
+port is called, are nearly completed, and will allow vessels drawing
+26-1/2 feet of water to float at any state of the tide. The jetty
+describes a large curve, and the bend is such that its extremity
+is parallel to the coast, and 930 yards distant from the low-water
+mark. The sheltered roadstead is about 272 acres in extent, and
+communication is made with the canal by a lock 66 feet wide and
+282 yards in length. From this point the canal, which has a depth
+of 26-1/2 feet and is fed by sea-water, runs in a straight line to
+Bruges, and ends at the inner port, which is within a few hundred
+yards of where the Roya used to meet the Zwijn. It is capable of
+affording a minimum capacity of 1,000,000 tons per annum, and the
+whole equipment has been <a name="page_91"><span class="page">Page
+91</span></a> fitted up necessary for dealing with this amount of
+traffic.
+</p>
+
+<p class="indent">
+The first ship, an English steamer, entered the new port at Bruges
+on the morning of May 29 in the present year (1905). The carillon
+rung from the Belfry, guns were fired, and a ceremony in honour of
+the event took place in the H&ocirc;tel de Ville. It now remains to
+be seen whether any part of the trade which was lost 400 years ago
+can be recovered by the skill of modern engineers and the resources
+of modern capital.
+</p>
+
+<p class="chapter">
+<a name="page_93"><span class="page">Page 93</span></a> THE PLAIN
+OF WEST FLANDERS&mdash;YPRES</p>
+
+<h2><a name="page_95"><span class="page">Page 95</span></a>
+CHAPTER VII</h2>
+
+<p class="subtitle">THE PLAIN OF WEST FLANDERS&mdash;YPRES</p>
+
+<p class="indent">
+To the west of Bruges the wide plain of Flanders extends to the
+French frontier. Church spires and windmills are the most prominent
+objects in the landscape; but though the flatness of the scenery is
+monotonous, there is something pleasing to the eye in the endless
+succession of well-cultivated fields, interrupted at intervals by
+patches of rough bushland, canals, or slow-moving streams winding
+between rows of pollards, country houses embowered in woods and
+pleasure-grounds, cottages with fruitful gardens, orchards, small
+villages, and compact little towns, in most of which the diligent
+antiquary will find something of interest&mdash;a modest belfry,
+perhaps, with a romance of its own; a parish church, whose foundations
+were laid long ago in ground dedicated, in the distant past, to
+the worship of Thor or Woden; or the remains, it may be, of a
+medi&aelig;val castle, from which some worthy knight, whose name is
+forgotten <a name="page_96"><span class="page">Page 96</span></a>
+except in local traditions, rode away to the Crusades.
+</p>
+
+<p class="indent">
+This part of West Flanders, which lies wedged in between the coast,
+with its populous bathing stations, and the better-known district
+immediately to the south of it, where Ghent, Tournai, Courtrai,
+and other important centres draw many travellers every year, is
+seldom visited by strangers, who are almost as much stared at in
+some of the villages as they would be in the streets of Pekin. It
+is, however, very accessible. The roads are certainly far from
+good, and anything in the shape of a walking tour is out of the
+question, for the strongest pedestrian would have all his pleasure
+spoilt by the hard-going of the long, straight causeway. The ideal
+way to see the Netherlands and study the life of the people is
+to travel on the canals; but these are not so numerous here as
+in other parts of the country, and, besides, it is not very easy
+to arrange for a passage on the barges. But, in addition to the
+main lines of the State Railway, there are the 'Chemins-de-fer
+Vicinaux,' or light district railways, which run through all parts
+of Belgium. The fares on these are very low, and there are so many
+stoppages that the traveller can see a great many places in the
+course of a single <a name="page_97"><span class="page">Page
+97</span></a> day. There are cycle tracks, too, alongside most
+of the roads, the cost of keeping them in order being paid out of
+the yearly tax paid by the owners of bicycles.[*]
+</p>
+
+<p class="footnote">
+[Footnote *: Bicycles entering Belgium pay an <i>ad valorem</i>
+duty of 12 per cent.]
+</p>
+
+<p><a name="ill15"></a></p>
+<table class="center" style="width: 746px;">
+<tr><td>
+ <img src="images/fig015.jpg" width="746" height="572" alt="Fig. 15">
+</td></tr>
+<tr><td>THE FLEMISH PLAIN</td></tr>
+</table>
+
+<p class="indent">
+This is the most purely Flemish part of Flanders. One very seldom
+notices that Spanish type of face which is so common elsewhere&mdash;at
+Antwerp, for instance. Here the race is almost unmixed, and the
+peasants speak nothing but Flemish to each other. Many of them
+do not understand a word of French, though in Belgium French is,
+as everyone knows, the language of public life and of literature.
+The newspapers published in Flemish are small, and do not contain
+much beyond local news. The result is that the country people in
+West Flanders know very little of what is going on in the world
+beyond their own parishes. The standard of education is low, being
+to a great extent in the hands of the clergy, who have hitherto
+succeeded in defeating all proposals for making it universal and
+compulsory.
+</p>
+
+<p class="indent">
+But, steeped as most of them are in ignorance and superstition, the
+agricultural labourers of West Flanders are, to all appearance, quite
+contented <a name="page_98"><span class="page">Page 98</span></a>
+with their lot. Living is cheap, and their wants are few. Coffee,
+black bread, potatoes, and salted pork, are the chief articles of
+diet, and in some households even the pork is a treat for special
+occasions. They seldom taste butter, using lard instead; and the
+'margarine' which is sold in the towns does not find its way into
+the cottages of the outlying country districts. Sugar has for many
+years been much dearer than in England, and the price is steadily
+rising, but with this exception the food of the people is cheap.
+Tea enters Belgium duty free, but the peasants never use it. Many
+villagers smoke coarse tobacco grown in their own gardens, and a
+10-centimes cigar is the height of luxury. Tobacco being a State
+monopoly in France, the high price in that country makes smuggling
+common, and there is a good deal of contraband trading carried
+on in a quiet way on the frontiers of West Flanders. The average
+wage paid for field labour is from 1 franc 50 centimes to 2 francs
+a day for married men&mdash;that is to say, from about 1s. 3d.
+to 1s. 8d. of English money. Bachelors generally receive 1 franc
+(10d.) a day and their food. The working hours are long, often from
+five in the morning till eight in the evening in summer, and in
+winter from sunrise till <a name="page_99"><span class="page">Page
+99</span></a> sunset, with one break at twelve o'clock for dinner,
+consisting of bread with pork and black coffee, and another about
+four in the afternoon, when what remains of the mid-day meal is
+consumed.
+</p>
+
+<p class="indent">
+The Flemish farmhouse is generally a substantial building, with
+two large living-rooms, in which valuable old pieces of furniture
+are still occasionally to be found, though the curiosity dealers
+have, during the last quarter of a century, carried most of them
+away, polished them up, and sold them at a high profit. Carved
+chests, bearing the arms of ancient families, have been discovered
+lying full of rubbish in barns or stables, and handsome cabinets,
+with fine mouldings and brass fittings, have frequently been picked
+up for a few francs. The heavy beams of the ceilings, black with age,
+the long Flemish stoves, and the quaint window-seats deeply sunk in
+the thick walls, still remain, and make the interiors of many of these
+houses very picturesque; but the 'finds' of old furniture, curious
+brass or pewter dishes, and even stray bits of valuable tapestry,
+which used to rouse the cupidity of strangers, are now very rare.
+Almost all the brass work which is so eagerly bought by credulous
+tourists at Bruges in summer is bran-new stuff cleverly manufactured
+for sale&mdash;and <a name="page_100"><span class="page">Page
+100</span></a> sold it is at five or six times its real market
+value! There are no bargains to be picked up on the Dyver or in
+the shops of Bruges.
+</p>
+
+<p><a name="ill16"></a></p>
+<table class="center" style="width: 715px;">
+<tr><td>
+ <img src="images/fig016.jpg" width="715" height="584" alt="Fig. 16">
+</td></tr>
+<tr><td>DUINHOEK.<br />Interior of a Farmhouse.</td></tr>
+</table>
+
+<p class="indent">
+The country life is simple. A good deal of hard drinking goes on
+in most villages. More beer, probably, is consumed in Belgium per
+head of the population than in any other European country, Germany
+not excepted, and the system of swallowing 'little glasses' of fiery
+spirit on the top of beer brings forth its natural fruits. The
+drunken ways of the people are encouraged by the excessive number
+of public-houses. Practically anyone who can pay the Government
+fee and obtain a barrel of beer and a few tumblers may open a
+drinking-shop. It is not uncommon in a small country village with
+about 200 inhabitants to see the words 'Herberg' or 'Estaminet' over
+the doors of a dozen houses, in which beer is sold at a penny (or
+less) for a large glass, and where various throat-burning liquors
+of the <i>petit verre</i> species can be had at the same price;
+and the result is that very often a great portion of the scanty
+wage paid on Saturday evening is melted into beer or gin on Sunday
+and Monday. As a rule, the Flemish labourer, being a merry,
+light-hearted soul, is merely noisy and jovial in a brutal sort
+of way <a name="page_101"><span class="page">Page 101</span></a>
+in his cups; but let a quarrel arise, out come the knives, and
+before the rural policeman saunters along there are nasty rows,
+ending in wounds and sometimes in murder. When the lots are drawn
+for military service, and crowds of country lads with their friends
+flock into the towns, the public-houses do good business. Those
+who have drawn lucky numbers, and so escaped the conscription,
+get drunk out of joy; while those who find they must serve in the
+army drown their sorrow, or celebrate the occasion if they are
+of a martial turn, by reeling about the streets arm in arm with
+their companions, shouting and singing. Whole families, old and
+young alike, often join in these performances, and they must be
+very drunk and very disorderly before the police think of making
+even the mildest remonstrance.
+</p>
+
+<p class="indent">
+The gay character of the Flemings is best seen at the 'kermesse,'
+or fair, which is held in almost every village during summer. At
+Bruges, Ypres, and Furnes, and still more in such large cities as
+Brussels or Antwerp, the kermesse has ceased to be typical of the
+country, and is supplanted by fairs such as may be seen in England
+or in almost any other country. 'Merry-go-rounds' driven by steam,
+elaborate circuses, menageries, waxwork <a name="page_102"><span
+class="page">Page 102</span></a> exhibitions, movable theatres,
+and modern 'shows' of every kind travel about, and settle for a
+few days, perhaps even for a few weeks, in various towns. The
+countryfolk of the surrounding district are delighted, and the
+showmen reap a goodly harvest of francs and centimes; but these
+fairs are tiresome and commonplace, much less amusing and lively
+than, for example, St. Giles's Fair at Oxford, though very nearly
+as noisy. But the kermesse proper, which still survives in some
+places, shows the Flemings amusing themselves in something more like
+the old fashion than anything which can be seen in the Market-Place
+of Bruges or on the boulevards of Brussels or Antwerp. Indeed,
+some of the village scenes, when the young people are dancing or
+shooting with bows and arrows at the mark, while the elders sit,
+with their mugs of beer and long pipes, watching and gossiping,
+are very like what took place in the times of the old painters who
+were so fond of producing pictures of the kermesses. The dress of
+the people, of course, is different, but the spirit of the scene,
+with its homely festivities, is wonderfully little changed.
+</p>
+
+<p class="indent">
+About twenty miles from the French frontier is the town of Ypres,
+once the capital of Flanders, and which in the time of Louis of
+Nevers was one of <a name="page_103"><span class="page">Page
+103</span></a> the three 'bonnes villes,' Bruges and Ghent being the
+others, which appointed deputies to defend the rights and privileges
+of the whole Flemish people.
+</p>
+
+<p class="indent">
+As Bruges grew out of the rude fortress on the banks of the Roya,
+so Ypres developed from a stronghold built, probably about the year
+900, on a small island in the river Yperlee. It was triangular
+in shape, with a tower at each corner, and was at first known by
+the inhabitants of the surrounding plain as the 'Castle of the
+Three Towers.' In course of time houses began to appear on the
+banks of the river near the island. A rampart of earth with a ditch
+defended these, and as the place grew, the outworks became more
+extensive. Owing to its strategic position, near France and in a
+part of Flanders which was constantly the scene of war, it was of
+great importance; and probably no other Flemish town has seen its
+defences so frequently altered and enlarged as Ypres has between
+the primitive days when the Crusading Thierry d'Alsace planted
+hedges of live thorns to strengthen the towers, and the reign of
+Louis XIV., when a vast and elaborate system of fortifications
+was constructed on scientific principles, under the direction of
+Vauban.
+</p>
+
+<p class="indent">
+The citizens of Ypres took a prominent part in <a name="page_104"><span
+class="page">Page 104</span></a> most of the great events which
+distinguished the heroic period of Flemish history. In July, 1302,
+a contingent of 1,200 chosen men, '500 of them clothed in scarlet and
+the rest in black,' were set to watch the town and castle of Courtrai
+during the Battle of the Golden Spurs, and in the following year
+the victory was celebrated by the institution of the Confraternity
+of the Archers of St. Sebastian, which still exists at Ypres, the
+last survivor of the armed societies which flourished there during
+the Middle Ages. Seven hundred burghers of Ypres marched to Sluis,
+embarked in the Flemish boats which harassed the French fleet during
+the naval fight of June, 1340, and at the close of the campaign
+formed themselves into the Confraternity of St. Michael, which
+lasted till the French invasion of 1794. Forty years later we find
+no fewer than 5,000 of the men of Ypres, who had now changed their
+politics, on the French side at the Battle of Roosebeke, fighting
+in the thick mist upon the plain between Ypres and Roulers on that
+fatal day which saw the death of Philip van Artevelde and the triumph
+of the Leliarts.
+</p>
+
+<p><a name="ill17"></a></p>
+<table class="center" style="width: 558px;">
+<tr><td>
+ <img src="images/fig017.jpg" width="558" height="746" alt="Fig. 17">
+</td></tr>
+<tr><td>ADINKERQUE.<br />At the Kermesse.</td></tr>
+</table>
+
+<p class="indent">
+Next year, so unceasingly did the tide of war flow over the plain
+of Flanders, an English army, commanded by Henry Spencer, Bishop of
+Norwich, <a name="page_105"><span class="page">Page 105</span></a>
+landed at Calais under the pretext of supporting the partisans
+of Pope Urban VI., who then occupied the Holy See, against the
+adherents of Pope Clement VII., who had established himself at
+Avignon. The burghers of Ghent flocked to the English standard, and
+the allies laid siege to Ypres, which was defended by the French
+and the Leliarts, who followed Louis of Maele, Count of Flanders,
+and maintained the cause of Clement.
+</p>
+
+<p class="indent">
+At that time the gateways were the only part of the fortifications
+made of stone. The ramparts were of earth, planted on the exterior
+slope with a thick mass of thorn-bushes, interlaced and strengthened
+by posts. Outside there were more defences of wooden stockades,
+and beyond them two ditches, divided by a dyke, on which was a
+palisade of pointed stakes. The town, thus fortified, was defended
+by about 10,000 men, and un June 8, 1383, the siege was begun by
+a force consisting of 17,000 English and 20,000 Flemings of the
+national party, most of whom came from Bruges and Ghent.
+</p>
+
+<p class="indent">
+The English had been told that the town would not offer a strong
+resistance, and on the first day of the siege 1,000 of them tried
+to carry it at once by assault. They were repulsed; and after that
+<a name="page_106"><span class="page">Page 106</span></a> assaults
+by the besiegers and sorties by the garrison continued day after
+day, the loss of life on both sides being very great. At last the
+besiegers, finding that they could not, in the face of the shower
+of arrows, javelins, and stones which met them, break through the
+palisades and the sharp thorn fences (those predecessors of the
+barbed-wire entanglements of to-day), force the gates, or carry
+the ramparts, built three wooden towers mounted on wheels, and
+pushed them full of soldiers up to the gates. But the garrison
+made a sortie, seized the towers, destroyed them, and killed or
+captured the soldiers who manned them.
+</p>
+
+<p class="indent">
+Spencer on several occasions demanded the surrender of the town,
+but all his proposals were rejected. The English pressed closer and
+closer, but were repulsed with heavy losses whenever they delivered
+an assault. The hopes of the garrison rose high on August 7, the
+sixty-first day of the siege, when news arrived that a French army,
+100,000 strong, accompanied by the forces of the Count of Flanders,
+was marching to the relief of Ypres. Early next morning the English
+made a fresh attempt to force their way into the town, but they
+were once more driven back. A little later in the day they twice
+advanced with the utmost <a name="page_107"><span class="page">Page
+107</span></a> bravery. Again they were beaten back. So were the
+burghers of Ghent, whom the English reproached for having deceived
+them by saying that Ypres would fall in three days, and whose answer
+to this accusation was, a furious attack on one of the gates, in
+which many of them fell. In the afternoon the English again advanced,
+and succeeded in forcing their way through part of the formidable
+thorn hedge; but it was of no avail, and once more they had to
+retire, leaving heaps of dead behind them. After a rest of some
+hours, another attack was made on seven different parts of the
+town at the same time. This assault was the most furious and bloody
+of the siege, but it was the last. Spencer saw that, in spite of
+the splendid courage of his soldiers and of the Flemish burghers,
+it would be impossible to take the town before the French army
+arrived, and during the night the English, with their allies from
+Ghent and Bruges, retired from before Ypres. The failure of this
+campaign left Flanders at the mercy of France; but the death of
+Count Louis of Maele, which took place in January, 1384, brought
+in the House of Burgundy, under whose rule the Flemings enjoyed
+a long period of prosperity and almost complete independence.
+</p>
+
+<p class="indent">
+<a name="page_108"><span class="page">Page 108</span></a> It was
+believed in Ypres that the town had been saved by the intercession
+of the Virgin Mary, its patron saint. In the Cathedral Church of
+St. Martin the citizens set up an image of Notre, Dame-de-Thuine,
+that is, Our Lady of the Enclosures, an allusion to the strong
+barrier of thorns which had kept the enemy at bay; and a kermesse,
+appointed to be held on the first Sunday of August every year in
+commemoration of the siege, received the name of the 'Thuindag,' or
+Day of the Enclosures.[*] The people of Ypres, though they fought
+on the French side, had good reason to be proud of the way in which
+they defended their homes; but the consequences of the siege were
+disastrous, for the commerce of the town never recovered the loss
+of the large working-class population which left it at that time.
+</p>
+
+<p class="footnote">
+[Footnote *: 'Thuin,' or 'tuin,' in Flemish means an enclosed space,
+such as a garden plot.]
+</p>
+
+<p><a name="ill18"></a></p>
+<table class="center" style="width: 770px;">
+<tr><td>
+ <img src="images/fig018.jpg" width="770" height="543" alt="Fig. 18">
+</td></tr>
+<tr><td>A FARMSTEADING</td></tr>
+</table>
+
+<p class="indent">
+The religious troubles of the sixteenth century left their mark
+on Ypres as well as on the rest of Flanders. Everyone has read
+the glowing sentences in which the historian of the Dutch Republic
+describes the Cathedral of Antwerp, and tells how it was wrecked by
+the reformers during the image-breaking in the summer of 1566. What
+happened <a name="page_109"><span class="page">Page 109</span></a>
+on the banks of the Scheldt appeals most to the imagination; but all
+over Flanders the statues and the shrines, the pictures and the
+stores of ecclesiastical wealth, with which piety, or superstition,
+or penitence had enriched so many churches and religious houses,
+became the objects of popular fury. There had been field-preaching
+near Ypres as early as 1562.[*] Other parts of West Flanders had
+been visited by the apostles of the New Learning, and on August 15,
+1566, the reformers swept down upon Ypres and sacked the churches.
+</p>
+
+<p class="footnote">
+[Footnote *: Motley, <i>Rise of the Dutch Republic</i>, part ii.,
+chapter vi.]
+</p>
+
+<p class="indent">
+In the awful tragedy which soon followed, when Parma came upon
+the scene, that 'spectacle of human energy, human suffering, and
+human strength to suffer, such as has not often been displayed
+upon the stage of the world's events' the town had its share of
+the persecutions and exactions which followed the march of the
+Spanish soldiery; but for more than ten years a majority of the
+burghers adhered to the cause of Philip. In July, 1578, however,
+Ypres fell into the hands of the Protestants, and became their
+headquarters in West Flanders. Five years later Alexander of Parma
+besieged it. The siege lasted until April of the following year,
+when the Protestants, worn out by <a name="page_110"><span
+class="page">Page 110</span></a> famine, capitulated, and the town
+was occupied by the Spaniards, who 'resorted to instant measures
+for cleansing a place which had been so long in the hands of the
+infidels, and, as the first step towards this purification, the
+bodies of many heretics who had been buried for years were taken
+from their graves and publicly hanged in their coffins. All living
+adherents to the Reformed religion were instantly expelled from
+the place.'[*] By this time the population was reduced to 5,000
+souls, and the fortifications were a heap of ruins.
+</p>
+
+<p class="footnote">
+[Footnote *: Motley, <i>Rise of the Dutch Republic</i>, part ii.,
+chapter vi.]
+</p>
+
+<p><a name="ill19"></a></p>
+<table class="center" style="width: 545px;">
+<tr><td>
+ <img src="images/fig019.jpg" width="545" height="752" alt="Fig. 19">
+</td></tr>
+<tr><td>YPRES.<br />Place du Mus&eacute;e (showing Top Part of
+the Belfry).</td></tr>
+</table>
+
+<p class="indent">
+A grim memorial of those troublous times is still preserved at
+Ypres. The Place du Mus&eacute;e is a quiet corner of the town,
+where a Gothic house with double gables contains a collection of
+old paintings, medals, instruments of torture, and some other
+curiosities. It was the Bishop of Ypres who, at midnight on June
+4, 1568, announced to Count Egmont, in his prison at Brussels, that
+his hour had come; and the cross-hilted sword, with its long straight
+blade, which hangs on the wall of the Museum is the sword with which
+the executioner 'severed his head from his shoulders at a single
+blow' on the following morning. The same <a name="page_111"><span
+class="page">Page 111</span></a> weapon, a few minutes later, was
+used for the despatch of Egmont's friend, Count Horn.
+</p>
+
+<p class="indent">
+Before the end of that dismal sixteenth century Flanders regained
+some of the liberties for which so much blood had been shed; but
+while the Protestant Dutch Republic rose in the north, the 'Catholic'
+or 'Spanish' Netherlands in the south remained in the possession
+of Spain until the marriage of Philip's daughter Isabella to the
+Archduke Albert, when these provinces were given as a marriage
+portion to the bride. This was in 1599. Though happier times followed
+under the moderate rule of Albert and Isabella, war continued to
+be the incessant scourge of Flanders, and during the marching and
+countermarching of armies across this battlefield of Europe, Ypres
+scarcely ever knew what peace meant. Four times besieged and four
+times taken by the French in the wars of Louis XIV., the town had
+no rest; and for miles all round it the fields were scarred by the
+new system of attacking strong places which Vauban had introduced
+into the art of war. Louis, accompanied by Schomberg and Luxembourg,
+was himself present at the siege of 1678; and Ypres, having been ceded
+to France by the Treaty of Nimeguen in that year, was afterwards
+strengthened by <a name="page_112"><span class="page">Page
+112</span></a> fortifications constructed from plans furnished by
+the great French engineer.[*]
+</p>
+
+<p class="footnote">
+[Footnote *: Letter from Vauban to Louvois on the fortifications
+of Ypres, 1689; Vereecke, pp. 325-357.]
+</p>
+
+<p class="indent">
+In the year 1689 Vauban speaks of Ypres as a place 'formerly great,
+populous, and busy, but much reduced by the frequent sedition and
+revolts of its inhabitants, and by the great wars which it has
+endured.' And in this condition it has remained ever since. Though
+the period which followed the Treaty of Rastadt in 1714, when Flanders
+passed into the possession of the Emperor Charles VI., and became
+a part of the 'Austrian Netherlands,' was a period of considerable
+improvement, Ypres never recovered its position, not even during
+the peaceful reign of the Empress Maria Theresa. The revolution
+against Joseph II. disturbed everything, and in June, 1794, the town
+yielded, after a short siege, to the army of the French Republic.
+The name of Flanders disappeared from the map of Europe. The whole of
+Belgium was divided, like France, with which it was now incorporated,
+into <i>d&eacute;partements</i>, Ypres being in the Department
+of the Lys. For twenty years, during the wars of the Republic,
+the Consulate, and the Empire, though the conscription was <a
+name="page_113"><span class="page">Page 113</span></a> a constant
+drain upon the youth of Flanders, who went away to leave their
+bones on foreign soil, nothing happened to disturb the quiet of
+the town, and the fortifications were falling into decay when the
+return of Napoleon from Elba set Europe in a blaze. During the
+Hundred Days guns and war material were hurried over from England,
+the old defences were restored, and new works constructed by the
+English engineers; but the Battle of Waterloo rendered these
+preparations unnecessary, and the military history of Ypres came
+to an end when the short-lived Kingdom of the Netherlands was
+established by the Congress of Vienna, though it was nominally a
+place of arms till 1852, when the fortifications were destroyed.
+Nowadays everything is very quiet and unwarlike. The bastions and
+lunettes, the casemates and moats, which spread in every direction
+round the town, have almost entirely disappeared, and those parts
+of the fortifications which remain have been turned into ornamental
+walks.[*]
+</p>
+
+<p class="footnote">
+[Footnote *: The evolution of Ypres from a feudal tower on an island
+until it became a great fortress can be traced in a very interesting
+volume of maps and plans published by M. Vereecke in 1858, as a
+supplement to his <i>Histoire Militaire d'Ypres</i>. It shows the
+first defensive works, those erected by Vauban, the state of the
+fortifications between 1794 and 1814, and what the English engineers
+did in 1815.]
+</p>
+
+<p class="indent">
+<a name="page_114"><span class="page">Page 114</span></a> But while
+so little remains of the works which were constructed, at such a
+cost and with so much labour, for the purposes of war, the arts
+of peace, which once flourished at Ypres, have left a more enduring
+monument. There is nothing in Bruges or any other Flemish town which
+can compare for massive grandeur with the pile of buildings at
+the west end of the Grand Place of Ypres. During two centuries the
+merchants of Flanders, whose towns were the chief centres of Western
+commerce and civilization, grew to be the richest in Europe, and a
+great portion of the wealth which industry and public spirit had
+accumulated was spent in erecting those noble civic and commercial
+buildings which are still the glory of Flanders. The foundation-stone
+of the Halle des Drapiers, or Cloth Hall, of Ypres was laid by
+Baldwin of Constantinople, then Count of Flanders, at the beginning
+of the thirteenth century, but more than 100 years had passed away
+before it was completed. Though the name of the architect who began
+it is unknown, the unity of design which characterizes the work
+makes it probable that the original plans were adhered to till the
+whole was finished. Nothing could be simpler than the general idea;
+but the effect is very fine. The ground-floor of the fa&ccedil;ade,
+about 150 <a name="page_115"><span class="page">Page 115</span></a>
+yards long, is pierced by a number of rectangular doors, over which
+are two rows of pointed windows, each exactly above the other, and
+all of the same style. In the upper row every second window is
+filled up, and contains the statue of some historical character.
+At each end there is a turret; and the belfry, a square with towers
+at the corners, rises from the centre of the building.
+</p>
+
+<p class="indent">
+Various additions have been made from time to time to the original
+Halle des Drapiers since it was finished in the year 1304, and of
+these the 'Nieuwerck' is the most interesting. The east end of the
+Halle was for a long time hidden by a number of wooden erections,
+which, having been put up for various purposes after the main building
+was finished, were known as the 'Nieuwe wercken,' or new works.
+They were pulled down in the beginning of the seventeenth century,
+and replaced by the stone edifice, in the style of the Spanish
+Renaissance, which now goes by the name of the Nieuwerck, with its
+ten shapely arches supported by slender pillars, above whose sculptured
+capitals rise tiers of narrow windows and the steeply-pitched roof
+with gables of curiously carved stone. Ypres had ceased to be a
+great commercial city long before the Nieuwerck was built; but
+the Cloth <a name="page_116"><span class="page">Page 116</span></a>
+Hall was a busy place during the thirteenth and fourteenth centuries,
+when Ypres shared with Bruges the responsibility of managing the
+Flemish branch of the Hanseatic League.
+</p>
+
+<p class="indent">
+The extensive system of monopolies which the League maintained
+was, as a matter of course, the cause of much jealousy and bad
+feeling. In Flanders, Ghent, Bruges, and Ypres defended their own
+privileges against other towns, and quarrelled amongst themselves.
+The merchants of Ypres had a monopoly which forbade all weaving for
+three leagues round the town, under a penalty of fifty livres and
+confiscation of the looms and linen woven; but the weavers in the
+neighbouring communes infringed this monopoly, and sold imitations of
+Ypres linen cloth on all hands. There was constant trouble between
+the people of Ypres and their neighbours at Poperinghe. Sometimes
+the weavers of Ypres, to enforce their exclusive privileges, marched
+in arms against Poperinghe, and sometimes the men of Poperinghe
+retaliated by attacking their powerful rivals. Houses were burnt,
+looms were broken up, and lives were lost in these struggles, which
+were so frequent that for a long time something like a chronic
+state of war existed between the two places.
+</p>
+
+<p><a name="ill20"></a></p>
+<table class="center" style="width: 748px;">
+<tr><td>
+ <img src="images/fig020.jpg" width="748" height="553" alt="Fig. 20">
+</td></tr>
+<tr><td>YPRES.<br />Arcade under the Nieuwerk.</td></tr>
+</table>
+
+<p class="indent">
+<a name="page_117"><span class="page">Page 117</span></a> Besides
+the troubles caused by the jealousy of other towns, intestine disputes
+arising out of the perpetual contest between labour and capital
+went on from year to year within the walls of Ypres. There, as in
+the other Flemish towns, a sharp line was drawn between the working
+man, by whose hands the linen was actually woven, and the merchants,
+members of the Guilds, by whom it was sold. In these towns, which
+maintained armies and made treaties of peace, and whose friendship
+was sought by princes and statesmen, the artisans, whose industry
+contributed so much to the importance of the community, resented
+any infringement of their legal rights. By law the magistrates of
+Ypres were elected annually, and because this had not been done
+in 1361 the people rose in revolt against the authorities. The
+mob invaded the H&ocirc;tel de Ville, where the magistrates were
+assembled. The Baillie, Jean Deprysenaere, trusting to his influence
+as the local representative of the Count of Flanders, left the
+council chamber, and tried to appease the rioters. He was set upon
+and killed. Then the crowd rushed into the council chamber, seized
+the other magistrates, and locked them up in the belfry, where they
+remained prisoners for some days. The leaders of the revolt met, and
+resolved to kill their <a name="page_118"><span class="page">Page
+118</span></a> prisoners, and this sentence was executed on the
+Burgomaster and two of the Sheriffs, who were beheaded in front
+of the Halle in the presence of their colleagues.[*] It was by
+such stern deeds that the fierce democracy of the Flemish communes
+preserved their rights.
+</p>
+
+<p class="footnote">
+[Footnote *: Vereecke, p. 41.]
+</p>
+
+<p class="indent">
+Each town, however, stood for itself alone. The idea of government
+by the populace on the marketplace was common to them all, but they
+were kept apart by the exclusive spirit of commercial jealousy.
+The thirst for material prosperity consumed them; but they had no
+bond of union, and each was ready to advance its own interests at
+the expense of its rivals. Therefore, either in the face of foreign
+invasion, or when the policy of some Count led to revolt and civil
+war, it was seldom that the people of Flanders were united. 'L'Union
+fait la Force' is the motto of modern Belgium, but in the Middle Ages
+there was no powerful central authority round which the communes
+rallied. Hence the spectacle of Ghent helping an English army to
+storm the ramparts of Ypres, or of the Guildsmen of Bruges girding
+on their swords to strike a blow for Count Louis of Maele against
+the White Hoods who marched from Ghent. <a name="page_119"><span
+class="page">Page 119</span></a> Hence the permanent unrest of
+these Flemish towns, the bickerings and the sheddings of blood, the
+jealousy of trade pitted against trade or of harbour against harbour,
+the insolence in the hour of triumph and the abject submission in
+the hour of defeat, and all the evils which discord brought upon
+the country. No town suffered more than Ypres from the distracted
+state of Flanders, which, combined with the ravages of war and the
+religious dissensions of the sixteenth century, reduced it from
+the first rank amongst the cities of the Netherlands to something
+very like the condition of a quiet country town in an out-of-the-way
+corner of England. That is what the Ypres of to-day is like&mdash;a
+sleepy country town, with clean, well-kept streets, dull and
+uninteresting save for the stately Cloth Hall, which stands there
+a silent memorial of the past.
+</p>
+
+<p class="chapter">
+<a name="page_121"><span class="page">Page 121</span></a>
+FURNES&mdash;THE PROCESSION OF PENITENTS</p>
+
+<h2><a name="page_123"><span class="page">Page 123</span></a>
+CHAPTER VIII</h2>
+
+<p class="subtitle">FURNES&mdash;THE PROCESSION OF PENITENTS</p>
+
+<p class="indent">
+The traveller wandering amongst the towns and villages in this
+corner of West Flanders is apt to feel that he is on a kind of
+sentimental journey as he moves from place to place, and finds
+himself everywhere surrounded by things which belong to the past
+rather than to the present. The very guidebooks are eloquent if we
+read between the lines. This place 'was formerly of much greater
+importance.' That 'was formerly celebrated for its tapestries.'
+From this H&ocirc;tel de Ville 'the numerous statuettes with which
+the building was once embellished have all disappeared.' The tower
+of that church has been left unfinished for the last 500 years.
+'Fuimus' might be written on them all. And so, some twenty miles
+north of Ypres, on a plain which in the seventeenth century was
+so studded with earthen redoubts and serrated by long lines of
+field-works and ditches that the whole countryside between Ypres and
+Dunkirk <a name="page_124"><span class="page">Page 124</span></a> was
+virtually one vast entrenched camp, we come to the town of Furnes,
+another of the places on which time has laid its heavy hand.
+</p>
+
+<p class="indent">
+The early history of Furnes is obscure, though it is generally
+supposed to have grown up round a fortress erected by Baldwin
+Bras-de-Fer to check the inroads of the Normans. It suffered much,
+like its neighbours, from wars and revolutions,[*] and is now one
+of the quietest of the Flemish towns. The market-place is a small
+square, quaintly picturesque, surrounded by clusters of little
+brick houses with red and blue tiled roofs, low-stepped gables,
+and deep mouldings round the windows. Behind these dwelling-places
+the bold flying buttresses of the Church of Ste. Walburge, whose
+relics were brought to Furnes by Judith, wife of Baldwin Bras-de-Fer,
+and the tower of St. Nicholas, lift themselves on the north and
+east; and close together in a corner to the west are the dark gray
+H&ocirc;tel de Ville and Palais de Justice, in <a name="page_125"><span
+class="page">Page 125</span></a> a room of which the judges of the
+Inquisition used to sit.
+</p>
+
+<p class="footnote">
+[Footnote *: 'Furnes &eacute;tait devenue un <i>oppidium</i>, aux termes
+d'une charte de 1183, qui avait &agrave; se d&eacute;fendre &agrave; la
+fois contre les incursions des &eacute;trangers et les attaques d'une
+population "indocile et cruelle," comme l'appelle l'Abb&eacute; de
+Saint Riquier Hariulf, toujours d&eacute;chir&eacute;e par les factions
+et toujours pr&ecirc;te &agrave; la r&eacute;volte.'&mdash;GILLIODTS
+VAN SEVEREN: <i>Recueil des Anciennes Coutumes de la Belgique;
+Quartier de Furnes</i>, vol. i., p. 28.]
+</p>
+
+<p><a name="ill21"></a></p>
+<table class="center" style="width: 530px;">
+<tr><td>
+ <img src="images/fig021.jpg" width="530" height="791" alt="Fig. 21">
+</td></tr>
+<tr><td>FURNES.<br />Grand Place and Belfry.</td></tr>
+</table>
+
+<p class="indent">
+Though some features are common to nearly all the Flemish
+towns&mdash;the market-place, the belfry, the H&ocirc;tel de Ville,
+the old gateways, and the churches, with their cherished
+paintings&mdash;yet each of them has generally some association of
+its own. In Bruges we think of how the merchants bought and sold,
+how the gorgeous city rose, clothed itself in all the colours of the
+rainbow, glittered for a time, and sank in darkness. In the crowded
+streets of modern Ghent, the busy capital of East Flanders, we seem
+to catch a glimpse of bold Jacques van Artevelde shouldering his way
+up to the Friday Market, or of turbulent burghers gathering there
+to set Pope, or Count of Flanders, or King of Spain at defiance.
+Ypres and its flat meadows suggest one of the innumerable paintings
+of the Flemish wars, the 'battle-pieces' in which the Court artists
+took such pride: the town walls with ditch and glacis before them,
+and within them the narrow-fronted houses, and the flag flying
+from steeple or belfry; the clumsy cannon puffing out clouds of
+smoke; the King of France capering on a fat horse and holding up
+his baton in an attitude of command in the foreground; and in the
+distance the tents of <a name="page_126"><span class="page">Page
+126</span></a> the camp, where the travelling theatre was set up,
+and the musicians fiddled, and an army of serving-men waited on the
+rouged and powdered ladies who had followed the army into Flanders.
+</p>
+
+<p><a name="ill22"></a></p>
+<table class="center" style="width: 591px;">
+<tr><td>
+ <img src="images/fig022.jpg" width="591" height="707" alt="Fig. 22">
+</td></tr>
+<tr><td>FURNES.<br />Peristyle of Town Hall and Palais de
+Justice.</td></tr>
+</table>
+
+<p class="indent">
+Furnes, somehow, always recalls the Spanish period. The H&ocirc;tel
+de Ville, a very beautiful example of the Renaissance style, with
+its rare hangings of Cordovan leather and its portraits of the
+Archduke Albert and his bride, the Infanta Isabella, is scarcely
+changed since it was built soon after the death of Philip II. The
+Corps de Garde Espagnol and the Pavilion des Officiers Espagnols
+in the market-place, once the headquarters of the whiskered bravos
+who wrought such ills to Flanders, are now used by the Municipal
+Council of the town as a museum and a public library; but the stones
+of this little square were often trodden by the persecutors, with
+their guards and satellites, in the years when Peter Titelmann
+the Inquisitor stalked through the fields of Flanders, torturing
+and burning in the name of the Catholic Church and by authority
+of the Holy Office. The spacious room in which the tribunal of the
+Inquisition sat is nowadays remarkable only for its fine proportions
+and venerable appearance; but, though it was not erected until
+after the Spanish <a name="page_127"><span class="page">Page
+127</span></a> fury had spent its force, and at a time when wiser
+methods of government had been introduced, it reminds us of the
+days when the maxims of Torquemada were put in force amongst the
+Flemings by priests more wicked and merciless than any who could
+be found in Spain. And in the market-place the people must often
+have seen the dreadful procession by means of which the Church
+sought to strike terror into the souls of men. Those public orgies
+of clerical intolerance were the suitable consummation of the crimes
+which had been previously committed in the private conclave of
+the Inquisitors. The burning or strangling of a heretic was not
+accompanied by so much pomp and circumstance in small towns like
+Furnes as in the great centres, where multitudes, led by the highest
+in the land, were present to enjoy the spectacle; but the Inquisition
+of the Netherlands, under which Flanders groaned for so many years,
+was, as Philip himself once boasted, 'much more pitiless than that
+of Spain.'
+</p>
+
+<p class="indent">
+The groans of the victims will never more be heard in the
+torture-chamber, nor will crowds assemble in the market-place to
+watch the cort&egrave;ge of the <i>auto-da-f&eacute;</i>; but every
+year the famous Procession of Penitents, which takes place on the
+<a name="page_128"><span class="page">Page 128</span></a> last
+Sunday of July, draws many strangers to Furnes.
+</p>
+
+<p class="indent">
+It is said in Bruges that the ghost of a Spanish soldier, condemned
+to expiate eternally a foul crime done at the bidding of the Holy
+Office, walks at midnight on the Quai Vert, like Hamlet's father
+on the terrace at Elsinore; and superstitious people might well
+fancy that a spectre appears in the market-place of Furnes on the
+summer's night when the town is preparing for the annual ceremony.
+The origin of the procession was this: In the year 1650 a soldier
+named Mannaert, only twenty-two years old, being in garrison at
+Furnes, went to Confession and Communion in the Chapel of the Capucins.
+After he had received the consecrated wafer, he was persuaded by one
+of his comrades, Mathurin Lejeusne, to take it out of his mouth,
+wrap it in a cloth, and, on returning to his lodging, fry it over
+a fire, under the delusion that by reducing it to powder he would
+make himself invulnerable. The young man was arrested, confessed his
+guilt, and himself asked for punishment. Condemned to be strangled,
+he heard the sentence without a murmur, and went to his death singing
+the penitential psalms. Soon afterwards Mathurin Lejeusne, the
+instigator of the sacrilege, was shot <a name="page_129"><span
+class="page">Page 129</span></a> for some breach of military duty.
+This was regarded as a proof of Divine justice, and the citizens
+resolved that something must be done to appease the wrath of God,
+which they feared would fall upon their town because of the outrage
+done, as they believed, to the body of His Son. A society calling
+itself the 'Confr&egrave;rie de la Sodalit&eacute; du Sauveur
+Crucifi&eacute; et de la Sainte M&egrave;re Marie, se trouvant
+en douleur dessous la Croix, sur Mont Calvaire,' had been formed
+a few years before at Furnes, and the members now decided that
+a Procession of Penitents should walk through the streets every
+summer and represent to the people the story of the Passion.
+</p>
+
+<p><a name="ill23"></a></p>
+<table class="center" style="width: 553px;">
+<tr><td>
+ <img src="images/fig023.jpg" width="553" height="779" alt="Fig. 23">
+</td></tr>
+<tr><td>NIEUPORT.<br />Interior of Church.</td></tr>
+</table>
+
+<p class="indent">
+Though the procession at Furnes is a thing of yesterday compared to
+the Procession of the Holy Blood at Bruges, it is far more suggestive
+of medi&aelig;valism. The hooded faces of the penitents, the quaint
+wooden figures representing Biblical characters, the coarse dresses,
+the tawdry colours, the strangely weird arrangement of the whole
+business, take us back into the monkish superstitions of the Dark
+Ages, with their mystery plays. It is best seen from one of the
+windows of the Spanish House, or from the balcony of the H&ocirc;tel de
+Ville, on a sultry day, when the sky is heavy <a name="page_130"><span
+class="page">Page 130</span></a> with black clouds, and thunder
+growls over the plain of Flanders, and hot raindrops fall now and
+then into the muddy streets. The first figure which appears is a
+veiled penitent bearing the standard of the Sodality. Then come,
+one after another, groups of persons representing various scenes
+in the Bible story, each group preceded by a penitent carrying
+an inscription to explain what follows. Abraham with his sword
+conducts Isaac to the sacrifice on Mount Moriah. A penitent holding
+the serpent and the cross walks before Moses. Two penitents wearily
+drag a car on which Joseph and Mary are seen seated in the stable
+at Bethlehem. The four shepherds and the three Magi follow. Then
+comes the flight into Egypt, with Mary on an ass led by Joseph, the
+infant Christ in her arms. Later we see the doctors of the Temple
+walking in two rows, disputing with the young Jesus in their midst.
+The triumphal entry into Jerusalem is represented by a crowd of
+schoolchildren waving palm-branches and singing hosannahs round
+Jesus mounted on an ass. The agony in the garden, Peter denying
+his Lord and weeping bitterly, Jesus crowned with thorns, Pilate
+in his judgment-hall, the Saviour staggering beneath the cross,
+the Crucifixion itself, the Resurrection <a name="page_131"><span
+class="page">Page 131</span></a> and the Ascension, are all shown
+with the crude realism of the Middle Ages. There are penitents
+bearing ponderous crosses on their shoulders, or carrying in their
+hands the whips, the nails, the thorns, the veil of the Temple
+rent in twain, a picture of the darkened sun, and other symbols
+of the Passion. At the end, amidst torches and incense and solemn
+chanting, the Host is exhibited for the adoration of the crowd.
+</p>
+
+<p><a name="ill24"></a></p>
+<table class="center" style="width: 547px;">
+<tr><td>
+ <img src="images/fig024.jpg" width="547" height="762" alt="Fig. 24">
+</td></tr>
+<tr><td>FURNES.<br />Tower of St. Nicholas.</td></tr>
+</table>
+
+<p class="indent">
+Much of this spectacle is grotesque, and even ludicrous; but there
+is also a great deal that is terribly real, for the penitents are
+not actors playing a part, but are all persons who have come to
+Furnes for the purpose of doing penance. They are disguised by
+the dark brown robes which cover them from head to foot, so that
+they can see their way only through the eyeholes in the hoods which
+hide their faces; but as they pass silently along, bending under
+the heavy crosses, or holding out before them scrolls bearing such
+words as, 'All they that see Me laugh Me to scorn,' 'They pierced
+My hands and My feet,' or, 'See if there be any sorrow like unto
+My sorrow,' there are glimpses of delicate white hands grasping
+the hard wood of the crosses, and of small, shapely feet bare in
+the mud. What sighs, what tears and vain <a name="page_132"><span
+class="page">Page 132</span></a> regrets, what secret tragedies of
+passion, guilt, remorse, may not be concealed amongst the doleful
+company who tread their own Via Dolorosa on that pilgrimage of
+sorrow through the streets of Furnes!
+</p>
+
+<p><a name="ill25"></a></p>
+<table class="center" style="width: 543px;">
+<tr><td>
+ <img src="images/fig025.jpg" width="543" height="770" alt="Fig. 25">
+</td></tr>
+<tr><td>FURNES.<br />In St. Walburge's Church.</td></tr>
+</table>
+
+<p class="chapter">
+<a name="page_133"><span class="page">Page 133</span></a>
+NIEUPORT&mdash;THE BATTLE OF THE DUNES</p>
+
+<h2><a name="page_135"><span class="page">Page 135</span></a>
+CHAPTER IX</h2>
+
+<p class="subtitle">NIEUPORT&mdash;THE BATTLE OF THE DUNES</p>
+
+<p class="indent">
+On the morning of July 2, in the year 1600, two armies&mdash;Spaniards,
+under the Archduke Albert, and Dutchmen, under Prince Maurice of
+Nassau&mdash;stood face to face amongst the dunes near Nieuport,
+where the river Yser falls into the sea about ten miles west from
+Ostend.
+</p>
+
+<p class="indent">
+In a field to the east of Nieuport there is a high, square tower,
+part of a monastery and church erected by the Templars in the middle
+of the twelfth century, which, though it escaped complete destruction,
+was set on fire and nearly consumed when the town was attacked and laid
+in ruins by the English and the burghers of Ghent in 1383, the year of
+their famous siege of Ypres. It is now in a half-ruinous condition,
+but in July, 1600, it was an important part of the fortifications,
+and from the top the watchmen of the Spanish garrison could see
+the country all round to a great distance beyond the broad moat
+which then surrounded the strong walls <a name="page_136"><span
+class="page">Page 136</span></a> of Nieuport. A few miles inland,
+to the southwest, in the middle of the plain of Flanders, were the
+houses of Furnes, grouped round the church tower of St. Nicholas.
+To the north a wide belt of sandhills (the 'dunes'), with the sea
+beyond them, extended far past Ostend on the east, and to the harbour
+of Dunkirk on the west. Nearer, on the landward side of the dunes
+to the east, and within less than a mile of each other, were the
+villages of Westende and Lombaerdzyde. Close at hand, all round
+Nieuport, there were numerous small lakes and watercourses connected
+with the channel of the Yser, which, flowing past the town, widened
+out until it joined the sea, and became a harbour, which on that
+morning was full of shipping.
+</p>
+
+<p class="indent">
+A new chapter had just begun in the history of West Flanders when
+the Dutchmen and the Spaniards thus met to slaughter each other
+amongst the sand and rushes of the dunes. Philip II. had offered to
+cede the Spanish Netherlands to his daughter, the Infanta Isabella,
+on condition that a marriage was arranged between her and the Archduke
+Albert of Austria. After the death of Philip II. this offer was
+confirmed by his successor, Philip III., and the wedding took place
+in April, 1599.
+</p>
+
+<p><a name="ill26"></a></p>
+<table class="center" style="width: 539px;">
+<tr><td>
+ <img src="images/fig026.jpg" width="539" height="764" alt="Fig. 26">
+</td></tr>
+<tr><td>NIEUPORT.<br />A Fair Parishioner.</td></tr>
+</table>
+
+<p class="indent">
+<a name="page_137"><span class="page">Page 137</span></a> Albert
+and Isabella were both entering on the prime of life, the Archduke
+being forty and the Infanta thirty-two at the time of their marriage,
+and were both of a character admirably fitted for the lofty station
+to which they had been called. In their portraits, which hang,
+very often frayed and tarnished, on the walls of the H&ocirc;tel
+de Ville of many a Flemish town, there is nothing very royal or
+very attractive; but, even after making every allowance for the
+flattery of contemporary historians, there can be little doubt
+that their popularity was well deserved&mdash;well deserved if
+even a part of what has been said about them is true. The Archduke
+is always said to have taken Philip II. as a model of demeanour,
+but he had none of the worst faults of the sullen, powerful despot,
+with that small mind, that 'incredibly small' mind of his, and
+cold heart, cold alike to human suffering and human love, who had
+held the Flemings, whom he hated, for so many years in the hollow
+of his hand. His grave mien and reserved habits, probably acquired
+during his sojourn at the Court of Spain, were distasteful to the
+gay and pleasure-loving people of Flanders, who would have preferred
+a Prince more like Charles V., whose versatility enabled him to adapt
+himself to the customs <a name="page_138"><span class="page">Page
+138</span></a> of each amongst the various races over whom he ruled.
+Nevertheless, if they did not love him they respected him, and were
+grateful for the moderation and good feeling which distinguished
+his reign, and gave their distracted country, after thirty years
+of civil war, a period of comparative tranquillity.
+</p>
+
+<p class="indent">
+The Infanta Isabella, <i>d&eacute;bonnaire</i>, affable, tolerant,
+and noble-hearted, as she is described, gained the hearts of the
+Flemings as her husband never did. 'One could not find any Court
+more truly royal or more brilliant in its public f&ecirc;tes, which
+sometimes recall the splendid epoch of the House of Burgundy. Isabella
+loves a country life. She is often to be seen on horseback, attending
+the tournaments, leading the chase, flying the hawk, taking part
+in the sports of the bourgeoise, shooting with the crossbow, and
+carrying off the prize.' Above all things, her works of charity
+endeared her to the people. In time of war she established hospitals
+for the wounded, for friends and enemies alike, where she visited
+them, nursed them, and dressed their wounds with her own hands,
+with heroic courage and tenderness.[*]
+</p>
+
+<p class="footnote">
+[Footnote *: De Gerlache, i. 260.]
+</p>
+
+<p><a name="ill27"></a></p>
+<table class="center" style="width: 545px;">
+<tr><td>
+ <img src="images/fig027.jpg" width="545" height="759" alt="Fig. 27">
+</td></tr>
+<tr><td>NIEUPORT.<br />Hall and Vicarage.</td></tr>
+</table>
+
+<p class="indent">
+Even on their first coming into Flanders, before their characters were
+known except by hearsay, <a name="page_139"><span class="page">Page
+139</span></a> they were received with extraordinary enthusiasm.
+Travelling by way of Luxembourg, they came to Namur, where their
+first visit was made the occasion of a military f&ecirc;te, conducted
+under the personal supervision of Comte Florent de Berlaimont. At
+Nivelles the Duc d'Arschot paid out of his own purse the cost of
+the brilliant festivities to which the people of Brabant flocked
+in order to bid their new rulers welcome, and himself led the
+procession, accompanied by the Archbishop of Malines and the Bishop
+of Antwerp. So they journeyed on amidst scenes of public rejoicing
+until they came to Brussels, where they established their Court in
+accordance with the customs and ceremonies which had been usual
+under the Dukes of Burgundy and the Kings of Spain.
+</p>
+
+<p class="indent">
+But when the Archdukes, as they were called, passed from town to
+town on this Royal progress, the phantoms of war, pestilence, and
+famine hung over the land. The great cities of Flanders had been
+deserted by thousands of their inhabitants. The sea trade of the
+country had been destroyed by the vigorous blockade which the Dutch
+ships of war maintained along the coast. Religious intolerance had
+driven the most industrious of the working classes to find a refuge
+in Holland or England. <a name="page_140"><span class="page">Page
+140</span></a> Villages lay in ruins, surrounded by untilled fields
+and gardens run to seed. Silent looms and empty warehouses were
+seen on every side. To such a pass had the disastrous policy of
+the Escurial brought this fair province of the Spanish Empire!
+From all parts of Flanders the cry for peace went up, but the time
+for peace was not yet come.[*]
+</p>
+
+<p class="footnote">
+[Footnote *: <i>L'Abb&eacute; Nameche</i>, xxi. 6-8.]
+</p>
+
+<p class="indent">
+The new reign had just begun when Maurice of Nassau suddenly invaded
+Flanders with a great force, and laid siege to Nieuport, the garrison
+of which, reinforced by an army, at the head of which the Archduke
+Albert had hurried across Flanders, was under the command of the
+Archduke himself, and many Spanish Generals of great experience
+in the wars.
+</p>
+
+<p><a name="ill28"></a></p>
+<table class="center" style="width: 757px;">
+<tr><td>
+ <img src="images/fig028.jpg" width="757" height="544" alt="Fig. 28">
+</td></tr>
+<tr><td>NIEUPORT.<br />The Quay, with Eel-boats and
+Landing-stages.</td></tr>
+</table>
+
+<p class="indent">
+Though the Court at Brussels had been taken by surprise, the Dutch
+army was in a position of great danger. Part of it lay on the west
+side of the Yser, and part to the east, amongst the dunes near
+Lombaerdzyde and Westende, with a bridge of boats thrown across the
+river as their only connection. Their ships were at anchor close
+to the shore; but Prince Maurice frankly told his men that it was
+useless to think of embarking in case of defeat, and that, therefore,
+they must either win <a name="page_141"><span class="page">Page
+141</span></a> the day or perish there, for the Spaniards were
+before them under the protection of Nieuport, the river divided
+them, the sea was behind them, and it would be impossible for a
+beaten army to escape by retreating through the dunes in the direction
+of Ostend.
+</p>
+
+<p class="indent">
+Such was the position of affairs beneath the walls of Nieuport
+at sunrise on July 2, 1600. The morning was spent by the Dutch
+in preparing for battle. Towards noon the Spanish leaders held
+a council of war, at which it was decided to attack the enemy as
+soon as possible, and about three o'clock the battle began. A stiff
+breeze from the west, blowing up the English Channel, drove clouds
+of sand into the eyes of the Spaniards, and the bright rays of the
+afternoon sun, shining in their faces as they advanced to the attack,
+dazzled and confused them. But, in spite of these disadvantages, it
+seemed at first as if the fortunes of the day were to go in their
+favour.
+</p>
+
+<p class="indent">
+The bridge of boats across the Yser was broken, and some of the
+Dutch regiments, seized by a sudden panic, began to retreat towards
+the sea; but, finding it impossible to reach the ships, they rallied,
+and began once more to fight with all the dogged courage of their
+race. For some hours the battle was continued with equal bravery
+on both <a name="page_142"><span class="page">Page 142</span></a>
+sides, the Spaniards storming a battery which the Dutch had entrenched
+amongst the dunes, and the Dutch defending it so desperately that
+the dead and wounded lay piled in heaps around it. But at last
+the Spanish infantry were thrown into confusion by a charge of
+horsemen; the Archduke Albert was wounded, and had to retire from
+the front to have his injuries attended to. Prince Maurice ordered
+a general advance of all his army, and in a few minutes the enemy
+were fleeing from the battlefield, leaving behind them 3,000 dead,
+800 prisoners, and more than 100 standards. The loss on the Dutch
+side was about 2,000.
+</p>
+
+<p class="indent">
+The Archduke Albert, who had narrowly escaped being himself taken
+prisoner, succeeded in entering Nieuport safely with what remained
+of his army. The town remained in the hands of the Spaniards, for
+Prince Maurice, after spending some days in vain attempts to capture
+it, marched with his whole force to Ostend, where soon afterwards
+began the celebrated siege, which was to last for three long years,
+and about which all Europe never tired of talking.[*]
+</p>
+
+<p class="footnote">
+[Footnote *: 'Le si&egrave;ge d'Ostende fut, pendant ces trois
+ans, la fable et la nouvelle de l'Europe; on ne se lassait pas d'en
+parler. Des princes, des &eacute;trangers de toutes les nations
+venaient y assister.'&mdash;<i>L'Abb&eacute; Nameche</i>, xxi.
+24.]
+</p>
+
+<p><a name="ill29"></a></p>
+<table class="center" style="width: 571px;">
+<tr><td>
+ <img src="images/fig029.jpg" width="571" height="732" alt="Fig. 29">
+</td></tr>
+<tr><td>NIEUPORT.<br />The Town Hall.</td></tr>
+</table>
+
+<p class="indent">
+<a name="page_143"><span class="page">Page 143</span></a> The history
+of Nieuport since those days has been the history of a gradual
+fall. Its sea trade disappeared slowly but surely; the fishing
+industry languished; the population decreased year by year; and it
+has not shared to any appreciable extent in the prosperity which
+has enriched other parts of Flanders since the Revolution of 1830.
+It is now a quiet, sleepy spot, with humble streets, which remind
+one of some fishing village on the east coast of Scotland. Men
+and women sit at the doors mending nets or preparing bait. The
+boats, with their black hulls and dark brown sails, move lazily
+up to the landing-stages, where a few small craft, trading along
+the coast, lie moored. Barges heavily laden with wood are pulled
+laboriously through the locks of the canals which connect the Yser
+with Ostend and Furnes. The ancient fortifications have long since
+disappeared, with the exception of a few grass-grown mounds; and
+only the grim tower of the Templars, standing by itself in a field
+on the outskirts of the town, remains to show that this insignificant
+place was once a mighty stronghold.
+</p>
+
+<p class="indent">
+In those old Flemish towns, however, it is always possible to find
+something picturesque; and here we have the Cloth Hall, with its
+low arches opening <a name="page_144"><span class="page">Page
+144</span></a> on the market-place, and the Gothic church, one
+of the largest in Flanders, with its porch and tower, where the
+bell-ringers play the chimes and the people pass devoutly to the
+services of the church. But that is all. Nieuport has few attractions
+nowadays, and is chiefly memorable in Flemish history because under
+its walls they fought that bloody 'Battle of the Dunes,' in which
+the stubborn strength and obstinacy of the Dutch overcame the fiery
+valour of the Spaniards.
+</p>
+
+<p class="indent">
+They are all well-nigh forgotten now, obstinate Dutchman and valiant
+Spaniard alike. Amongst the dunes not a vestige remains of the
+field-works for which they fought. Bones, broken weapons and shattered
+breastplates, and all the d&eacute;bris of the fight, were long
+ago buried fathoms deep beneath mounds of drifting sand. Old
+Nieuport&mdash;Nieuport Ville, as they call it now&mdash;for which so
+much blood was shed, is desolate and dreary with its small industries
+and meagre commerce; but a short walk to the north brings us to
+Nieuport-Bains, and to the gay summer life which pulsates all along
+the Flemish coast, from La Panne on the west to the frontiers of
+Holland.
+</p>
+
+<p><a name="ill30"></a></p>
+<table class="center" style="width: 557px;">
+<tr><td>
+ <img src="images/fig030.jpg" width="557" height="752" alt="Fig. 30">
+</td></tr>
+<tr><td>NIEUPORT.<br />Church Port (Evensong).</td></tr>
+</table>
+
+<p class="chapter">
+<a name="page_145"><span class="page">Page 145</span></a>
+THE COAST OF FLANDERS</p>
+
+<h2><a name="page_147"><span class="page">Page 147</span></a>
+CHAPTER X</h2>
+
+<p class="subtitle">THE COAST OF FLANDERS</p>
+
+<p class="indent">
+To walk from Nieuport Ville to the Digue de Mer at Nieuport-Bains
+is to pass in a few minutes from the old Flanders, the home of
+so much romance, the scene of so many stirring deeds, from the
+market-places with the narrow gables heaped up in piles around
+them, from the belfries soaring to the sky, from the winding streets
+and the narrow lanes, in which the houses almost touch each other
+from the tumble-down old hostelries, from the solemn aisles where
+the candles glimmer and the dim red light glows before the altar,
+from the land of Bras-de-Fer, and Thierry d'Alsace, and Memlinc,
+and Van Eyck, and Rubens, the land which was at once the Temple
+and the Golgotha of Europe, into the clear, broad light of modern
+days.
+</p>
+
+<p class="indent">
+The Flemish coast, from the frontiers of France to the frontiers
+of Holland, is throughout the same in appearance. The sea rolls
+in and breaks upon the yellow beach, which extends from east to
+west <a name="page_148"><span class="page">Page 148</span></a> for
+some seventy kilometres in an irregular line, unbroken by rocks or
+cliffs. Above the beach are the dunes, a long range of sandhills,
+tossed into all sorts of queer shapes by the wind, on which nothing
+grows but rushes or stunted Lombardy poplars, and which reach their
+highest point, the Hoogen-Blekker, about 100 feet above the sea,
+near Coxyde, a fishing village four or five miles from Nieuport.
+Behind the dunes a strip of undulating ground ('Ter Streep'), seldom
+more than a bare mile in width, covered with scanty vegetation,
+moss, and bushes, connects the barren sandhills with the cultivated
+farms, green fields, and woodlands of the Flemish plain. On the other
+side of the Channel the chalk cliffs and rocky coast of England
+have kept the waves in check; but the dunes were, for many long
+years, the only barrier against the encroachments of the sea on
+Flanders. They are, however, a very weak defence against the storms
+of autumn and winter. The sand drifts like snow before the wind,
+and the outlines of these miniature mountain ranges change often in
+a single night. At one time, centuries ago, this part of Flanders,
+which is now so bare, was, it is pretty clear, covered by forests,
+the remains of which are still sometimes found beneath the subsoil
+inland and under the sea. <a name="page_149"><span class="page">Page
+149</span></a> When the great change came is unknown, but the process
+was probably gradual. At an early period, here, as in Holland,
+the fight against the invasions of the sea began, and the first
+dykes are said to have been constructed in the tenth century. The
+first was known as the Evendyck, and ran from Heyst to Wenduyne.
+Others followed, but they were swept away, and now only a few traces
+of them are to be found, buried beneath the sand and moss.[*]
+</p>
+
+<p class="footnote">
+[Footnote *: Bortier, <i>Le Littoral de la Flandre au IXe et au
+XIXe Si&egrave;cles.</i>]
+</p>
+
+<p><a name="ill31"></a></p>
+<table class="center" style="width: 806px;">
+<tr><td>
+ <img src="images/fig031.jpg" width="806" height="521" alt="Fig. 31">
+</td></tr>
+<tr><td>THE DUNES.<br />A Stormy Evening.</td></tr>
+</table>
+
+<p class="indent">
+The wild storms of the tenth, eleventh, and twelfth centuries changed
+the aspect of the coast of Flanders. Nieuport rose in consequence
+of one of these convulsions of Nature, when the inhabitants of
+Lombaerdzyde, which was then a seaport, were driven by the tempests
+to the inland village of Santhoven, the name of which they changed
+to 'Neoportus'&mdash;the new harbour. This was in the beginning
+of the twelfth century, and thenceforth the struggle against the
+waves went on incessantly. Lands were granted by Thierry d'Alsace
+on condition that the owner should construct dykes, and Baldwin
+of Constantinople appointed guardians of the shore, charged with
+the duty of watching the <a name="page_150"><span class="page">Page
+150</span></a> sea and constructing defensive works. But the struggle
+was carried on under the utmost difficulties. In the twelfth century
+the sea burst in with resistless force upon the low-lying ground,
+washing away the dunes and swallowing up whole towns. The inroads
+of the waves, the heavy rains, and the earthquakes, made life so
+unendurable that there were thousands who left their homes and
+emigrated to Germany.
+</p>
+
+<p class="indent">
+Later, in the thirteenth century, there was a catastrophe of appalling
+dimensions, long known as the 'Great Storm,' when 40,000 Flemish
+men and women perished. This was the same tempest which overran
+the Dutch coast, and formed the Zuyder Zee, those 1,400 square
+miles of water which the Dutch are about to reclaim and form again
+into dry land. In the following century the town of Scarphout, in
+West Flanders, was overwhelmed, and the inhabitants built a new
+town for themselves on higher ground, and called it Blankenberghe,
+which is now one of the most important watering-places on the coast.
+</p>
+
+<p class="indent">
+Ever since those days this constant warfare against the storms
+has continued, and the sea appears to be bridled; but anyone who
+has watched the North Sea at high tide on a stormy day beating <a
+name="page_151"><span class="page">Page 151</span></a> on the shores
+of Flanders, and observed how the dunes yield to the pressure of the
+wind and waves, and crumble away before his eyes, must come to the
+conclusion that the peril of the ocean is not yet averted, and can
+understand the meaning of the great modern works, the <i>digues de
+mer</i>, or sea-fronts, as they would be called in England, which
+are being gradually constructed at such immense cost all along
+the coast.
+</p>
+
+<p class="indent">
+A most interesting and, indeed, wonderful thing in the recent history
+of the Netherlands is the rapid development of the Flemish littoral
+from a waste of sand, with here and there a paltry fishing hamlet
+and two or three small towns, into a great cosmopolitan pleasure
+resort. Seventy-five years ago, when Belgium became an independent
+country, and King Leopold I. ascended the throne, Ostend and Nieuport
+were the only towns upon the coast which were of any size; but Ostend
+was then a small fortified place, with a harbour wholly unsuited
+for modern commerce, and Nieuport, in a state of decadence, though
+it possessed a harbour, was a place of no importance. To-day the
+whole coast is studded with busy watering-places, about twenty of
+them, most of which have come into existence within the last fifteen
+years, with a resident <a name="page_152"><span class="page">Page
+152</span></a> population of about 60,000, which is raised by visitors
+in summer to, it is said, nearly 125,000. The dunes, which the old
+Counts of Flanders fought so hard to preserve from the waves, and
+which were at the beginning of the present century mere wastes of
+sand, a sort of 'no man's land,' of little or no use except for
+rabbit-shooting, are now valuable properties, the price of which
+is rising every year.
+</p>
+
+<p class="indent">
+The work of turning the sand into gold, for that is what the development
+of the Flemish coast comes to, has been carried out partly by the
+State and partly by private persons. In early times this belt of
+land upon the margin of the sea was held by the Counts of Flanders,
+who treated the ridge of sandhills above high-water mark as a natural
+rampart against the waves, and granted large tracts of the flat
+ground which lay behind to various religious houses. At the French
+Revolution these lands were sold as Church property at a very low
+figure, and were afterwards allowed, in many cases, to fall out of
+cultivation by the purchasers. So great a portion of the district
+was sold that at the present time only a small portion of the dune
+land is the property of the State&mdash;the narrow strip between
+Mariakerke and Middelkerke on the west of <a name="page_153"><span
+class="page">Page 153</span></a> Ostend, and that which lies between
+Ostend and Blankenberghe on the east. The larger portions, which
+are possessed by private owners, are partly the property of the
+descendants of those who bought them at the Revolution, and partly
+of building societies, incorporated for the purpose of developing
+what Mr. Hall Caine once termed the 'Visiting Industry'&mdash;that
+is to say, the trade in tourists and seaside visitors.[*]
+</p>
+
+<p class="footnote">
+[Footnote *: Letter to the Manx Reform League, November, 1903.]
+</p>
+
+<p><a name="ill32"></a></p>
+<table class="center" style="width: 754px;">
+<tr><td>
+ <img src="images/fig032.jpg" width="754" height="570" alt="Fig. 32">
+</td></tr>
+<tr><td>AN OLD FARMER</td></tr>
+</table>
+
+<p class="indent">
+Plage de Westende, Le Coq, and Duinbergen&mdash;three charming
+summer resorts&mdash;have been created by building societies.
+Nieuport-Bains and La Panne have been developed by the owners of
+the adjoining lands, the families of Crombez and Calmeyn. Wenduyne,
+on the other hand, which lies between Le Coq and Blankenberghe,
+has been made by the State, while the management of Blankenberghe,
+Heyst, and Middelkerke, as bathing stations, is in the hands of
+their communal councils.
+</p>
+
+<p class="indent">
+On the coast of Flanders, Ostend&mdash;'La Reine des Plages'&mdash;is,
+it need hardly be said, the most important place, and its rise has been
+very remarkable. Less than fifty years ago the population was in all
+about 15,000. During the last fifteen years it has increased by nearly
+15,000, and now amounts <a name="page_154"><span class="page">Page
+154</span></a> to about 40,000 in round numbers. The increase in
+the number of summer visitors has been equally remarkable. In the
+year 1860 the list of strangers contained 9,700 names; three years
+ago it contained no less than 42,000. This floating population
+of foreign visitors who come to Ostend is cosmopolitan to an extent
+unknown at any watering-place in England. In 1902 11,000 English,
+8,000 French, 5,000 Germans, and 2,000 Americans helped to swell
+the crowds who walked on the sea-front, frequented the luxurious
+and expensive hotels, or left their money on the gaming-tables at
+the Kursaal. On one day&mdash;August 15, 1902&mdash;7,000 persons
+bathed.[*]
+</p>
+
+<p class="footnote">
+[Footnote *: I give these figures on the authority of M. Paul Otlet,
+Advocate, of Brussels, to whom I am indebted for much information
+regarding the development of the coast of Flanders. See also an
+article by M. Otlet in <i>Le Cottage</i>, May 15 to June 15, 1904.]
+</p>
+
+<p class="indent">
+Blankenberghe, with its 30,000 summer visitors, comes next in importance
+to Ostend, while both Heyst and Middelkerke are crowded during
+the season. But the life at these towns is not so agreeable as at
+the smaller watering-places. The hotels are too full, and have,
+as a rule, very little except their cheapness to recommend them.
+There is usually a body calling itself the <i>comit&eacute; des
+f&ecirc;tes</i>, <a name="page_155"><span class="page">Page
+155</span></a> the members of which devote themselves for two months
+every summer to devising amusements, sports, and competitions of
+various kinds, instead of leaving people to amuse themselves in
+their own way, so that hardly a day passes on which the strains of
+a second-rate band are not heard in the local Kursaal, or a night
+which is not made hideous by a barrel-organ, to which the crowd
+is dancing on the <i>digue</i>. At the smaller places, however,
+though these also have their <i>comit&eacute; des f&ecirc;tes</i>,
+one escapes to a great extent from these disagreeable surroundings.
+</p>
+
+<p class="indent">
+May, June, and September are the pleasantest months upon the coast
+of Flanders, for the visitors are not so numerous, and even in
+mid-winter the dunes are worth a visit. Then the hotels and villas
+fronting the sea are closed, and their windows boarded up. The
+bathing-machines are removed from the beach, and stand in rows
+in some sheltered spot. The <i>digue</i>, a broad extent of level
+brickwork, is deserted, and the wind sweeps along it, scattering
+foam and covering it with sand and sprays of tangled seaweed. The
+mossy surface of the dunes is frozen hard as iron, and often the
+hailstones rush in furious blasts before the wind. For league after
+league there is not a sign of life, except the sea-birds <a
+name="page_156"><span class="page">Page 156</span></a> flying low
+near the shore, or the ships rising and falling in the waves far
+out to sea. In the winter months the coast of Flanders is bleak
+and stormy, but the air in these solitudes is as health-giving
+as in any other part of Europe.
+</p>
+
+<p class="indent">
+Of late years the Government, represented by Comte de Smet de Naeyer,
+has bestowed much attention on the development of the littoral,
+and King Leopold II. has applied his great business talents to
+the subject. Large sums of money have been voted by the Belgian
+Parliament for the construction of public works and the extension
+of the means of communication from place to place. There is a light
+railway, the 'Vicinal,' which runs along the whole coast, at a
+short distance from the shore, from Knocke, on the east, to La
+Panne in the extreme west, and which is connected with the system of
+State railways at various points. From Ostend, through Middelkerke,
+to Plage de Westende, an electric railway has been constructed,
+close to the beach and parallel to the Vicinal (which is about
+a mile inland), on which trains run every ten minutes during the
+summer season. As an instance of the speed and energy with which
+these works for the convenience of the public are carried out, when
+once they have been decided upon, it may be <a name="page_157"><span
+class="page">Page 157</span></a> mentioned that the contract for
+the portion of the electric line between Middelkerke and Plage de
+Westende, a distance of about a mile and a half, was signed on
+May 9, that five days later 200 workmen began to cut through the
+dunes, embank and lay the permanent way, and that on June 25, in
+spite of several interruptions owing to drifting sand and heavy
+rains, the first train of the regular service arrived at Plage de
+Westende.
+</p>
+
+<p><a name="ill33"></a></p>
+<table class="center" style="width: 746px;">
+<tr><td>
+ <img src="images/fig033.jpg" width="746" height="559" alt="Fig. 33">
+</td></tr>
+<tr><td>LA PANNE.<br />Interior of a Flemish Inn.</td></tr>
+</table>
+
+<p class="indent">
+A large sum, amounting to several millions of francs, is voted
+every year for the protection of the shores of Flanders against
+the encroachments of the sea, by the construction of these solid
+embankments of brickwork and masonry, which will, in the course
+of a few years, extend in an unbroken line along the whole coast
+from end to end. The building of these massive sea-walls is a work
+of great labour and expense, for what seems to be an impregnable
+embankment, perhaps 30 feet high and 90 feet broad, solid and strong
+enough to resist the most violent breakers, will be undermined and
+fall to pieces in a few hours, if not made in the proper way. A
+<i>digue</i>, no matter how thick, which rests on the sand alone
+will not last. A thick bed of green branches bound together must
+first be laid down as a foundation: this is strengthened by posts
+<a name="page_158"><span class="page">Page 158</span></a> driven
+through it into the sand. Heavy timbers, resting on bundles of
+branches lashed together, are wedged into the foundations, and
+slope inwards and upwards to within a few feet of the height to
+which it is intended to carry the <i>digue</i>. On the top another
+solid bed of branches is laid down, and the whole is first covered
+with concrete, and then with bricks or tiles, while the edge of
+the <i>digue</i>, at the top of the seaward slope, is composed of
+heavy blocks of stone cemented together and bound by iron rivets.
+</p>
+
+<p class="indent">
+<i>Digues</i> made in this solid fashion, all of them higher above
+the shore than the Thames Embankment is above the river, and some
+of them broader than the Embankment, will, before very many years
+have passed, stretch along the whole coast of Flanders without a
+break, and will form not only a defence against the tides, but a
+huge level promenade, with the dunes on one side and the sea on
+the other. This is a gigantic undertaking, but it will be completed
+during the lifetime of the present generation.
+</p>
+
+<p><a name="ill34"></a></p>
+<table class="center" style="width: 730px;">
+<tr><td>
+ <img src="images/fig034.jpg" width="730" height="565" alt="Fig. 34">
+</td></tr>
+<tr><td>LA PANNE.<br />A Flemish Inn&mdash;Playing Skittles.</td></tr>
+</table>
+
+<p class="indent">
+Another grandiose idea, which is actually being carried into effect,
+is to connect all the seaside resorts on the coast of Flanders by
+a great boulevard, 40 yards wide, with a road for carriages and <a
+name="page_159"><span class="page">Page 159</span></a> pedestrians,
+a track for motor-cars and bicycles, and an electric railway, all
+side by side. Large portions of this magnificent roadway, which
+is to be known as the 'Route Royale,' have already been completed
+between Blankenberghe and Ostend, and from Ostend to Plage de Westende.
+From Westende it will be continued to Nieuport-Bains, crossing the
+Yser by movable bridges, and thence to La Panne, and so onwards,
+winding through the dunes, over the French borders, and perhaps
+as far as Paris!
+</p>
+
+<p class="indent">
+A single day's journey through the district which this 'Route Royale'
+is to traverse will lead the traveller through the most interesting
+part of the dunes, and introduce him to most of the favourite
+<i>plages</i> on the coast of Flanders, and thus give him an insight
+into many characteristic Flemish scenes. La Panne, for instance,
+and Adinkerque, in the west and on the confines of France, are
+villages inhabited by fishermen who have built their dwellings
+in sheltered places amongst the dunes. The low white cottages of
+La Panne, with the strings of dried fish hanging on the walls,
+nestle in the little valley from which the place takes its name
+(for <i>panne</i> in Flemish means 'a hollow'), surrounded by trees
+and hedges, gay with wild roses in the summer-time. Each cottage
+stands in <a name="page_160"><span class="page">Page 160</span></a>
+its small plot of garden ground, and most of the families own
+fishing-boats of their own, and farm a holding which supplies them
+with potatoes and other vegetables.
+</p>
+
+<p class="indent">
+For a long time these cottages were the only houses at La Panne,
+which was seldom visited, except by a few artists; but about fifteen
+years ago the surveyors and the architects made their appearance,
+paths and roads were laid out, and, as if by magic, cottages and
+villas and the inevitable <i>digue de mer</i> have sprung up on
+the dunes near the sea, and not very far from the original village.
+The chief feature of the new La Panne is that the houses are, except
+those on the sea-front, built on the natural levels of the ground,
+some perched on the tops of the dunes, and others in the hollows
+which separate them. The effect is extremely picturesque, and the
+example of the builders of La Panne is being followed at other places,
+notably at Duinbergen, one of the very latest bathing stations,
+which has risen during the last three years about a mile to the
+east of Heyst.
+</p>
+
+<p class="indent">
+Another very interesting place is the Plage de Westende, the present
+terminus of the electric railway from Ostend. The old village of
+Westende lies a mile inland on the highway between Nieuport <a
+name="page_161"><span class="page">Page 161</span></a> and Ostend,
+close to the scene of the Battle of the Dunes. This Plage is, indeed,
+a model seaside resort, with a <i>digue</i> which looks down upon
+a shore of the finest sand, and from which, of an evening, one
+sees the lights of Ostend in the east, and the revolving beacon
+at Dunkirk shining far away to the west. The houses which front
+the sea, all different from each other, are in singularly good
+taste; and behind them are a number of detached cottages and villas,
+large and small, in every variety of design. Ten years ago the
+site of this little town was a rabbit warren; now everything is
+up to date: electric light in every house, perfect drainage, a
+good water-supply, tennis courts, and an admirable hotel, where
+even the passing stranger feels at home. Though only three-quarters
+of an hour from noisy, crowded, bustling Ostend by the railway, it
+is one of the quietest and most comfortable places on the coast
+of Flanders, and can be reached by travellers from England in a
+few hours.
+</p>
+
+<p class="indent">
+Some years hence the lovely, peaceful Plage de Westende may have
+grown too big, but when the sand has all been turned into gold, and
+when the contractors and builders have grown rich, those who have
+known Westende in its earlier days will think of it as the quiet
+spot about which at one <a name="page_162"><span class="page">Page
+162</span></a> time only a few people used to stroll; where perhaps
+the poet Verhaeren found something to inspire him; where many a
+long summer's evening was spent in pleasant talk on history, and
+painting, and music by a little society of men and women who spoke
+French, or German, or English, as the fancy took them, and laughed,
+and quoted, and exchanged ideas on every subject under the sun;
+where the professor of music once argued, and sprang up to prove
+his point by playing&mdash;but that is an allusion, or, as Mr.
+Kipling would say, 'another story.'
+</p>
+
+<p class="indent">
+The district in which Westende lies, with Lombaerdzyde, Nieuport,
+Furnes, and Coxyde close together, is the most interesting on the
+coast of Flanders. Le Coq, on the other hand, is in that part of
+the dune country which has least historical interest, and is chiefly
+known as the place where the Royal Golf Club de Belgique has its
+course. It is only twenty minutes from Ostend on the Vicinal railway,
+which has a special station for golfers near the Club House. There
+is no <i>digue</i>, and the houses are dotted about in a valley
+behind the dunes. This place has a curious resemblance to a Swiss
+village.
+</p>
+
+<p class="indent">
+A few years ago the owners of lands upon the Flemish littoral began
+to grasp the fact that there <a name="page_163"><span class="page">Page
+163</span></a> was a sport called golf, on which Englishmen were
+in the habit of spending money, and that it would be an addition
+to the attractions of Ostend if, beside the racecourse, there was
+a golf-course. King Leopold, who is said to contemplate using all
+the land between the outskirts of Ostend and Le Coq for sporting
+purposes, paid a large sum, very many thousands of francs, out of
+his own pocket, and the golf-links at Le Coq were laid out. The
+Club House is handsome and commodious, but, unfortunately, the
+course itself, which is the main thing, is not very satisfactory,
+being far too artificial. The natural 'bunkers' were filled up,
+and replaced by ramparts and ditches like those on some inland
+courses in England. On the putting greens the natural undulations
+of the ground have been levelled, and the greens are all as flat
+and smooth as billiard-tables. There are clumps of ornamental wood,
+flower-beds, and artificial ponds with goldfish swimming in them.
+It is all very pretty, but it is hardly golf. What with the 'Grand
+Prix d'Ostende,' the' Prix des Roses,' the 'Prix des Ombrelles,
+handicap libre, r&eacute;serv&eacute; aux Dames,' the 'Grand Prix
+des Dames,' and a number of other <i>objets d'art</i>, which are
+offered for competition on almost every day from the beginning <a
+name="page_164"><span class="page">Page 164</span></a> of June to
+the end of September, this is a perfect paradise for the pot-hunter
+and his familiar friend Colonel Bogey. Real golf, the strenuous game,
+which demands patience and steady nerves, perhaps, more than any
+other outdoor game, is not yet quite understood by many Belgians;
+but the bag of clubs is every year becoming more common on the
+Dover mail-boats.
+</p>
+
+<p class="indent">
+Most of these golf-bags find their way to Knocke, where many of
+the English colony at Bruges spend the summer, and which, as the
+coast of Flanders becomes better known, is visited every year by
+increasing numbers of travellers from the other side of the Channel.
+Knocke is in itself one of the least attractive places on the Flemish
+littoral. The old village, a nondescript collection of houses,
+lies on the Vicinal railway about a mile from the sea, which is
+reached by a straight roadway, and where there is a <i>digue</i>,
+numerous hotels, pensions, and villas, all of which are filled
+to overflowing in the season. The air, indeed, is perfect, and
+there are fine views from the <i>digue</i> and the dunes of the
+island of Walcheren, Flushing, and the estuary of the Scheldt;
+but the place was evidently begun with no definite plan: the dunes
+were ruthlessly levelled, and the result is a few unlovely streets,
+<a name="page_165"><span class="page">Page 165</span></a> and a
+number of detached houses standing in disorder amidst surroundings
+from which everything that was picturesque has long since departed.
+</p>
+
+<p class="indent">
+But the dunes to the east are wide, and enclose a large space of
+undulating ground; and here the Bruges Golf and Sports Club has
+its links, which present a very complete contrast to the Belgian
+course at Le Coq. The links at Knocke, if somewhat rough and ready,
+are certainly sporting in the highest degree. Some of the holes,
+those in what is known as the Green Valley, are rather featureless;
+but in the other parts of the course there are numerous natural
+hazards, bunkers, and hillocks thick with sand and rushes. It has
+no pretentions to be a 'first-class' course (for one thing, it is
+too short), but in laying out the eighteen holes the ground has
+been utilized to the best advantage, and the Royal and Ancient
+game flourishes more at Knocke than at any other place in Belgium.
+The owners of the soil and the hotel-keepers, with a keen eye to
+business, and knowing that the golfing alone brings the English,
+from whom they reap a golden harvest, to Knocke, do all in their
+power to encourage the game, and it is quite possible that before
+long other links may be established along the coast. The soil of
+the strip behind <a name="page_166"><span class="page">Page
+166</span></a> the dunes is not so suitable for golf as the close
+turf of St. Andrews, North Berwick, or Prestwick, for in many places
+it consists of sand with a slight covering of moss; but with proper
+treatment it could probably be improved and hardened. It is merely
+a question of money, and money will certainly be forthcoming if
+the Government, the communes, and the private owners once see that
+this form of amusement will add to the popularity of the littoral.
+</p>
+
+<p class="indent">
+A short mile's walk to the west of Knocke brings us to Duinbergen,
+one of the newest of the Flemish <i>plages</i>, founded in the
+year 1901 by the Soci&eacute;t&eacute; Anonyme de Duinbergen, a
+company in which some members of the Royal Family are said to hold
+shares. At Knocke and others of the older watering-places everything
+was sacrificed to the purpose of making money speedily out of every
+available square inch of sand, and the first thing done was to
+destroy the dunes. But at Duinbergen the good example set by the
+founders of La Panne has been followed and improved upon, and nothing
+could be more <i>chic</i> than this charming little place, which
+was planned by Herr St&uuml;bben, of Cologne, an architect often
+employed by the King of the Belgians, whose idea was to create a
+small garden <a name="page_167"><span class="page">Page 167</span></a>
+city among the dunes. The dunes have been carefully preserved;
+the roads and pathways wind round them; most of the villas and
+cottages have been erected in places from which a view of the sea
+can be obtained; and even the <i>digue</i> has been built in a
+curve in order to avoid the straight line, which is apt to give an
+air of monotony to the rows of villas, however picturesque they may
+be in themselves, which face the sea at other places. So artistic
+is the appearance of the houses that the term 'Style Duinbergen'
+is used by architects to describe it. Electric lighting, a copious
+supply of water rising by gravitation to the highest houses, and
+a complete system of drainage, add to the luxuries and comforts
+of this <i>plage</i>, which is one of the best illustrations of
+the wonders which have been wrought among the dunes by that spirit
+of enterprise which has done so much for modern Flanders during
+the last few years.
+</p>
+
+<p class="chapter">
+<a name="page_169"><span class="page">Page 169</span></a>
+COXYDE&mdash;THE SCENERY OF THE DUNES</p>
+
+<h2><a name="page_171"><span class="page">Page 171</span></a>
+CHAPTER XI</h2>
+
+<p class="subtitle">COXYDE&mdash;THE SCENERY OF THE DUNES</p>
+
+<p class="indent">
+The whole of the coast-line is within the province of West Flanders,
+and its development in recent years is the most striking fact in
+the modern history of the part of Belgium with which this volume
+deals. The change which has taken place on the littoral during the
+last fifteen or twenty years is extraordinary, and the contrast
+between the old Flanders and the new, between the Flanders which
+lingers in the past and the Flanders which marches with the times,
+is brought vividly before us by the difference between such
+medi&aelig;val towns as Bruges, Furnes, or Nieuport, and the bright
+new places which glitter on the sandy shores of the Flemish coast.
+But in almost every corner of the dunes, close to these signs of
+modern progress, there is something to remind us of that past history
+which is, after all, the great charm of Flanders.
+</p>
+
+<p class="indent">
+<a name="page_172"><span class="page">Page 172</span></a> One of
+the most characteristic spots in the land of the dunes is the village
+of Coxyde, which lies low amongst the sandhills, about five miles
+west from Nieuport, out of sight of the sea, but inhabited by a
+race of fisherfolk who, curiously enough, pursue their calling on
+horseback. Mounted on their little horses, and carrying baskets
+and nets fastened to long poles, they go into the sea to catch
+small fish and shrimps. It is strange to see them riding about
+in the water, sometimes in bands, but more frequently alone or in
+pairs; and this curious custom, which has been handed down from
+father to son for generations, is peculiar to the part of the coast
+which lies between La Panne and the borders of France.
+</p>
+
+<p class="indent">
+Near Coxyde, and at the corner where the road from Furnes turns
+in the direction of La Panne, is a piece of waste ground which
+travellers on the Vicinal railway pass without notice. But here
+once stood the famous Abbey of the Dunes.
+</p>
+
+<p><a name="ill35"></a></p>
+<table class="center" style="width: 538px;">
+<tr><td>
+ <img src="images/fig035.jpg" width="538" height="787" alt="Fig. 35">
+</td></tr>
+<tr><td>COXYDE.<br />A Shrimper on Horseback.</td></tr>
+</table>
+
+<p class="indent">
+In the first years of the twelfth century a pious hermit named Lyger
+took up his abode in these solitary regions, built a dwelling for
+himself, and settled down to spend his life in doing good works and
+in the practice of religion. Soon, as others <a name="page_173"><span
+class="page">Page 173</span></a> gathered round him, his dwelling
+grew into a monastery, and at last, in the year 1122, the Abbey
+of the Dunes was founded. It was nearly half a century before the
+great building, which is said to have been the first structure of
+such a size built of brick in Flanders, was completed; but when at
+last the work was done the Abbey was, by all accounts, one of the most
+magnificent religious houses in Flanders, consisting of a group of
+buildings with no less than 105 windows, a rich and splendid church,
+so famous for its ornamental woodwork that the carvings of the stalls
+were reproduced in the distant Abbey of Melrose in Scotland, and a
+library which, as time went on, became a storehouse of precious
+manuscripts and hundreds of those wonderfully illustrated missals on
+which the monks of the Middle Ages spent so many laborious hours.
+We can imagine them in the cells of Coxyde copying and copying for
+hours together, or bending over the exquisitely coloured drawings
+which are still preserved in the museums of Flanders.
+</p>
+
+<p class="indent">
+But their most useful work was done on the lands which lay round the
+Abbey. There were at Coxyde in the thirteenth century no fewer than
+150 monks and 248 converts engaged at one time <a name="page_174"><span
+class="page">Page 174</span></a> in cultivating the soil.[*] They
+drained the marshes, and planted seeds where seeds would grow,
+until, after years of hard labour on the barren ground, the Abbey
+of the Dunes was surrounded by wide fields which had been reclaimed
+and turned into a fertile oasis in the midst of that savage and
+inhospitable desert.
+</p>
+
+<p class="footnote">
+[Footnote *: Derode, <i>Histoire Religieuse de la Flandre Maritime</i>,
+p.86.]
+</p>
+
+<p class="indent">
+When St. Bernard was preaching the Crusade in Flanders he came to
+Coxyde. On his advice the monks adopted the Order of the Cistercians,
+and their first abbot under the new rule afterwards sat in the
+chair of St. Bernard himself as Abbot of Clairvaux. Thereafter
+the Cistercian Abbey of the Dunes grew in fame, especially under
+the rule of St. Idesbaldus, who had come there from Furnes, where
+he had been a Canon of the Church of Ste. Walburge. 'It has also a
+special interest for English folk. It long held lands in the isle of
+Sheppey, as well as the advowson of the church of Eastchurch, in the
+same island. These were bestowed on it by Richard the Lion-Hearted.
+The legend says that these gifts were made to reward its sixth abbot,
+Elias, for the help he gave in releasing Richard from captivity.
+Anyhow, Royal <a name="page_175"><span class="page">Page 175</span></a>
+charters, and dues from the Archbishop of Canterbury, and a Bull of
+Pope Celestine III., confirmed the Abbey in its English possessions
+and privileges. The Abbey seems to have derived little benefit
+from these, and finally, by decision of a general congregation of
+the Cistercian Order, handed them over to the Abbot and Chapter
+of Bexley, to recoup the latter for the cost of entertaining monks
+of the Order going abroad, or returning from the Continent, on
+business of the Order.'[*]
+</p>
+
+<p class="footnote">
+[Footnote *: Robinson, <i>Bruges, an Historical Sketch</i>, p. 176.]
+</p>
+
+<p><a name="ill36"></a></p>
+<table class="center" style="width: 472px;">
+<tr><td>
+ <img src="images/fig036.jpg" width="472" height="756" alt="Fig. 36">
+</td></tr>
+<tr><td>COXYDE.<br />A Shrimper.</td></tr>
+</table>
+
+<p class="indent">
+The English invasion of the fifteenth century destroyed the work
+of the monks in their fields and gardens, but the Abbey itself
+was spared; and the great disaster did not come until a century
+later, when the image-breakers, who had begun their work amongst the
+Gothic arches of Antwerp, spread over West Flanders, and descended
+upon Coxyde. The Abbey was attacked, and the monks fled to Bruges,
+carrying with them many of their treasures, which are still to
+be seen in the collection on the Quai de la Poterie, beyond the
+bridge which is called the Pont des Dunes. The noble building, so
+long the home of so much piety and learning, and from which so many
+generations of apostles had gone forth to toil in the fields and <a
+name="page_176"><span class="page">Page 176</span></a> minister to
+the poor, was abandoned, and allowed to fall into ruins, until at
+last it gradually sunk into complete decay, and was buried beneath
+the sands. Not a trace of it now remains. History has few more
+piteous sermons to preach on the vanity of all the works of men.
+</p>
+
+<p class="indent">
+The fishermen on the coast of Flanders have, from remote times,
+paid their vows in the hour of danger to Notre Dame de Lombaerdzyde.
+If they escape from some wild storm they go on a pilgrimage of
+thanksgiving. They walk in perfect silence along the road to the
+shrine, for not a word must be spoken till they reach it; and these
+hardy seafaring men may be seen kneeling at the altar of the old,
+weather-beaten church which stands on the south side of the highway
+through the village, and in which are wooden models of ships hung
+up as votive offerings before an image of the Virgin, which is
+the object of peculiar veneration. The Madonna of Lombaerdzyde
+did not prevail to keep the sea from invading the village at the
+time when the inhabitants were driven to Nieuport, but the belief
+in her miraculous power is as strong to-day as it was in the Dark
+Ages.
+</p>
+
+<p><a name="ill37"></a></p>
+<table class="center" style="width: 748px;">
+<tr><td>
+ <img src="images/fig037.jpg" width="748" height="566" alt="Fig. 37">
+</td></tr>
+<tr><td>ADINKERQUE.<br />Village and Canal.</td></tr>
+</table>
+
+<p class="indent">
+There is a view of Lombaerdzyde which no one strolling on the dunes
+near Nieuport should fail to <a name="page_177"><span class="page">Page
+177</span></a> see&mdash;a perfect picture, as typical of the scenery
+in these parts as any landscape chosen by Hobbema or Ruysdael. A
+causeway running straight between two lofty dunes of bare sand,
+and bordered by stunted trees, forms a long vista at the end of
+which Lombaerdzyde appears&mdash;a group of red-roofed houses,
+with narrow gables and white walls, and in the middle the pointed
+spire of the church, beyond which the level plain of Flanders,
+dotted with other villages and churches and trees in formal rows,
+stretches away into the distance until it merges in the horizon.
+Adinkerque, a picturesque village beyond Furnes, is another place
+which calls to mind many a picture of the Flemish artists in the
+Mus&eacute;e of Antwerp and the Mauritshuis at The Hague; and the
+recesses of the dune country in which these places are hidden has a
+wonderful fascination about it&mdash;the irregular outlines of the
+dunes, some high and some low, sinking here into deep hollows of firm
+sand, and rising there into strange fantastic shapes, sometimes with
+sides like small precipices on which nothing can grow, and sometimes
+sloping gently downwards and covered with trembling poplars, spread
+in confusion on every side. Often near the shore the sandy barrier
+has been broken down by the wind or by the <a name="page_178"><span
+class="page">Page 178</span></a> waves, and a long gulley formed,
+which cuts deep into the dunes, and through which the sand drifts
+inland till it reaches a steep bank clothed with rushes, against
+which it heaps itself, and so, rising higher with the storms of
+each winter, forms another dune. This process has been going on for
+ages. The sands are for ever shifting, but moss begins to grow in
+sheltered spots; such wild flowers as can flourish there bloom and
+decay; the poplars shed their leaves, and nourish by imperceptible
+degrees the fibres of the moss; some hardy grasses take root; and
+at length a scanty greensward appears. By such means slowly, in
+the microcosm of the dunes, have been evolved out of the changing
+sands places fit for men to live in, until now along the strip
+which guards the coast of Flanders there are green glades gay with
+flowers, and shady dells, and gardens sheltered from the wind, plots
+of pasture-land, cottages and churches which seem to grow out of
+the landscape, their colouring so harmonizes with the colouring
+which surrounds them. And ever, close at hand, the sea is rolling
+in and falling on the shore. 'Come unto these yellow sands,' and
+when the sun is going down, casting a long bar of burnished gold
+across the water, against which, perhaps, the sail of some boat <a
+name="page_179"><span class="page">Page 179</span></a> looms dark
+for a moment and then passes on, the sky glows in such a lovely,
+tender light that those who watch it must needs linger till the
+twilight is fading away before they turn their faces inland. There
+are few evenings for beauty like a summer evening on the shores of
+Flanders.
+</p>
+
+<h2><a name="page_181"><span class="page">Page 181</span></a>
+INDEX</h2>
+
+<p class="index">
+Abbey of the Dunes, <a href="#page_172">172-176</a>; of Melrose,
+ <a href="#page_173">173</a><br />
+Adinkerque, <a href="#page_159">159</a>, <a href="#page_176">176</a><br />
+'Adoration of the Immaculate Lamb,' <a href="#page_69">69</a><br />
+Albert, Archduke, portrait at Furnes, <a href="#page_126">126</a>;
+ at the Battle of the Dunes, <a href="#page_135">135</a>,
+ <a href="#page_140">140</a>, <a href="#page_142">142</a>;
+ marries the Infanta Isabella, <a href="#page_136">136</a>;
+ character of, <a href="#page_137">137</a>,
+ <a href="#page_138">138</a>; wounded, <a href="#page_142">142</a><br />
+Albert, Prince, at Bruges, <a href="#page_82">82</a><br />
+Ancona, Bishop of, <a href="#page_35">35</a><br />
+Andr&eacute;, St., village of, <a href="#page_23">23</a><br />
+&Acirc;ne Aveugle, Rue de l', <a href="#page_15">15</a>,
+ <a href="#page_17">17</a>, <a href="#page_23">23</a><br />
+Angelo, Michael, <a href="#page_30">30</a><br />
+Anglaises, Couvent des Dames, <a href="#page_27">27</a><br />
+Antwerp, Cathedral of, <a href="#page_29">29</a>,
+ <a href="#page_68">68</a>, <a href="#page_108">108</a><br />
+Arschot, Duc d', <a href="#page_139">139</a><br />
+Artevelde, Jacques van, <a href="#page_61">61</a>,
+ <a href="#page_125">125</a><br />
+Artevelde, Philip van, <a href="#page_67">67</a>,
+ <a href="#page_104">104</a><br />
+Artois, Comte d', <a href="#page_52">52</a>,
+ <a href="#page_53">53</a><br />
+Augustinian Nuns, <a href="#page_27">27</a>
+</p>
+
+<p class="index">
+Baldwin, Bras-de-Fer, real founder of Bruges,
+ <a href="#page_14">14</a>; defends Flanders,
+ <a href="#page_15">15</a>; marries Judith,
+ <a href="#page_14">14</a>; builds Church of St. Donatian,
+ <a href="#page_15">15</a><br />
+Baldwin, King of Jerusalem, <a href="#page_33">33</a><br />
+Baldwin of Constantinople, <a href="#page_149">149</a><br />
+Baldwin VII., <a href="#page_18">18</a><br />
+Bannockburn, <a href="#page_52">52</a><br />
+Bardi, money-changers at Bruges, <a href="#page_66">66</a><br />
+Bassin de Commerce at Bruges, <a href="#page_58">58</a><br />
+Battle of the Dunes, <a href="#page_135">135</a> <i>et seq.</i><br />
+Battle of the Golden Spurs, <a href="#page_45">45</a> <i>et seq.</i>,
+ <a href="#page_52">52</a><br />
+B&eacute;guinage at Bruges, <a href="#page_27">27</a>; grove of,
+ <a href="#page_7">7</a><br />
+B&eacute;huchet, Nicholas, <a href="#page_63">63</a>,
+ <a href="#page_64">64</a><br />
+Belfry of Bruges, <a href="#page_5">5</a>, <a href="#page_6">6</a>,
+ <a href="#page_7">7</a>, <a href="#page_9">9</a><br />
+Belgian Parliament passes law for harbour near Heyst,
+ <a href="#page_90">90</a><br />
+Berlaimont, Comte Florent de, <a href="#page_139">139</a><br />
+Bernard, St., of Clairvaux, <a href="#page_32">32</a><br />
+Bertulf, Provost of St. Donatian, <a href="#page_19">19</a><br />
+Bexley, <a href="#page_175">175</a><br />
+Bicycles, import duty on, <a href="#page_97">97</a><br />
+'Bird of Honour,' <a href="#page_82">82</a>,
+ <a href="#page_83">83</a><br />
+Blankenberghe, new harbour near, <a href="#page_90">90</a>;
+ English fleet at, in 1340, <a href="#page_62">62</a>,
+ <a href="#page_153">153</a>, <a href="#page_154">154</a><br />
+Boniface VIII., <a href="#page_49">49</a><br />
+Bouchoute, H&ocirc;tel de, <a href="#page_4">4</a><br />
+Borthwick, Colonel, <a href="#page_78">78</a><br />
+Boterbeke, <a href="#page_8">8</a>, <a href="#page_9">9</a><br />
+Bourg, Place du, at Bruges, <a href="#page_15">15</a>,
+ <a href="#page_16">16</a>, <a href="#page_17">17</a><br />
+Brangwyn, William, <a href="#page_36">36</a><br />
+Breidel, John, <a href="#page_45">45</a>, <a href="#page_48">48</a>,
+ <a href="#page_50">50</a>, <a href="#page_52">52</a><br />
+Breskens, <a href="#page_69">69</a><br />
+Bristol, Earl of, at Bruges, <a href="#page_77">77</a><br />
+Bruges, described by John of Ypres, <a href="#page_8">8</a>,
+ <a href="#page_9">9</a>; origin of name, <a href="#page_9">9</a>;
+ primitive township of, <a href="#page_10">10</a>; boundaries in
+ early times, <a href="#page_10">10</a>; Market-Place,
+ <a href="#page_4">4</a>, <a href="#page_5">5</a>,
+ <a href="#page_45">45</a>; Halles, <a href="#page_5">5</a>;
+ early trade, <a href="#page_10">10</a>; the Loove at,
+ <a href="#page_20">20</a>; growth of, <a href="#page_18">18</a>;
+ capital of West Flanders, <a href="#page_14">14</a>; Baldwin
+ Bras-de-Fer its real founder, <a href="#page_14">14</a>; Place
+ du Bourg, <a href="#page_15">15</a>; murder of Charles
+ the Good, <a href="#page_18">18</a>; Joanna of Navarre at,
+ <a href="#page_46">46</a>; death of Marie, wife of
+ Maximilian, <a href="#page_30">30</a>; H&ocirc;tel de Ville,
+ <a href="#page_67">67</a>; Customs House, <a href="#page_57">57</a>;
+ Oriental appearance in Middle Ages, <a href="#page_75">75</a>;
+ produce sent to, in Middle Ages, <a href="#page_65">65</a>;
+ Hanseatic League at, <a href="#page_66">66</a>; Consulates at,
+ <a href="#page_66">66</a>; splendour of, in Middle Ages,
+ <a href="#page_67">67</a>, <a href="#page_68">68</a>;
+ under the House of Burgundy, <a href="#page_68">68</a>; loss of
+ trade, <a href="#page_68">68</a>, <a href="#page_69">69</a>;
+ pauperism, <a href="#page_74">74</a>; Charles II. at,
+ <a href="#page_75">75</a> <i>et seq.</i>; list of Charles II.'s
+ household at, <a href="#page_77">77</a>; death of
+ Catherine of Braganza at, <a href="#page_27">27</a>; fate of Church
+ at French Revolution, <a href="#page_86">86</a>; Napoleon at,
+ <a href="#page_36">36</a>; state of, since Revolution of
+ 1830, <a href="#page_86">86</a>; English
+ Jesuits at, <a href="#page_85">85</a>; Queen Victoria at,
+ <a href="#page_82">82</a>; relic of Holy Blood at,
+ <a href="#page_32">32</a> <i>et seq.</i>; Procession of the Holy
+ Blood, <a href="#page_36">36</a> <i>et seq.</i>; relic of the Holy
+ Cross, <a href="#page_30">30</a><br />
+Bruges Matins, <a href="#page_17">17</a>, <a href="#page_45">45</a><br />
+Brussels, Charles II. at, <a href="#page_81">81</a>; Church of Ste.
+ Gudule, <a href="#page_30">30</a>;
+ H&ocirc;tel de Ville, <a href="#page_67">67</a><br />
+Burchard, <a href="#page_19">19</a>, <a href="#page_20">20</a>,
+ <a href="#page_21">21</a><br />
+Burgundy, Charles, Duke of, <a href="#page_30">30</a><br />
+Burgundy, House of, <a href="#page_107">107</a><br />
+Burnet, Bishop, <a href="#page_80">80</a><br />
+Butler, Mr. J., <a href="#page_79">79</a>, <a href="#page_80">80</a>
+</p>
+
+<p class="index">
+Caine, Mr. Hall, <a href="#page_153">153</a><br />
+'Cairless,' Mr., <a href="#page_77">77</a><br />
+Capucins, Chapel of, at Furnes, <a href="#page_128">128</a><br />
+Casa Negra, <a href="#page_87">87</a><br />
+Cathedral of Antwerp, <a href="#page_30">30</a><br />
+Cathedral of St. Martin at Ypres, <a href="#page_138">138</a><br />
+Cathedral of St. Sauveur at Bruges, <a href="#page_30">30</a>,
+ <a href="#page_37">37</a>, <a href="#page_86">86</a><br />
+Catherine of Braganza, <a href="#page_27">27</a><br />
+Celestine III., <a href="#page_175">175</a><br />
+Chapel of the Capucins at Furnes, <a href="#page_128">128</a><br />
+Chapelle du Saint-Sang (St. Basil's) at Bruges,
+ <a href="#page_32">32</a>, <a href="#page_35">35</a>,
+ <a href="#page_37">37</a>, <a href="#page_86">86</a><br />
+Charlemagne, <a href="#page_13">13</a><br />
+Charles II. of England at Bruges, <a href="#page_75">75</a> <i>et
+ seq.</i><br />
+Charles the Bald, <a href="#page_13">13</a><br />
+Charles the Bold, <a href="#page_30">30</a><br />
+Charles the Good, <a href="#page_18">18-24</a><br />
+Charles V., <a href="#page_137">137</a><br />
+Charles VI., <a href="#page_112">112</a><br />
+Ch&acirc;tillon, Jacques de, <a href="#page_48">48</a>,
+ <a href="#page_49">49</a>, <a href="#page_50">50-53</a><br />
+Chemins-de-fer Vicinaux, <a href="#page_96">96</a><br />
+Church of Jerusalem at Bruges, <a href="#page_30">30</a><br />
+Church of Notre Dame at Bruges, <a href="#page_86">86</a><br />
+Church of St. Donatian at Bruges, <a href="#page_86">86</a><br />
+Church of Ste. Walburge, <a href="#page_88">88</a>,
+ <a href="#page_124">124</a><br />
+Cistercians, <a href="#page_174">174</a>, <a href="#page_175">175</a><br />
+Clairvaux, <a href="#page_32">32</a><br />
+Clauwerts, <a href="#page_17">17</a>, <a href="#page_46">46</a><br />
+Clement V., <a href="#page_34">34</a><br />
+Clement VII., <a href="#page_105">105</a><br />
+Cologne, <a href="#page_76">76</a>, <a href="#page_79">79</a><br />
+Comte de la Hanse, <a href="#page_66">66</a><br />
+Congress of Vienna, <a href="#page_113">113</a><br />
+Coninck, Peter de, <a href="#page_45">45</a>,
+ <a href="#page_47">47</a>, <a href="#page_48">48</a>,
+ <a href="#page_50">50</a>, <a href="#page_52">52</a><br />
+Consulate of France, <a href="#page_88">88</a>; of Spain,
+ <a href="#page_8">8</a>; of Smyrna, <a href="#page_87">87</a><br />
+Coolkerke, <a href="#page_70">70</a><br />
+Courtrai, <a href="#page_52">52</a>, <a href="#page_96">96</a><br />
+Couvent des Dames Anglaises, <a href="#page_7">7</a>,
+ <a href="#page_27">27</a>, <a href="#page_82">82</a><br />
+Coxyde, <a href="#page_172">172-174</a><br />
+Cranenberg, <a href="#page_4">4</a><br />
+Crecy, Battle of, <a href="#page_63">63</a><br />
+Cromwell, <a href="#page_76">76</a>, <a href="#page_79">79</a>,
+ <a href="#page_84">84</a><br />
+Customs House at Bruges, <a href="#page_57">57</a>
+</p>
+
+<p class="index">
+Dalgetty, Dugald, <a href="#page_77">77</a><br />
+Damme, <a href="#page_10">10</a>, <a href="#page_48">48</a>,
+ <a href="#page_49">49</a>, <a href="#page_50">50</a>,
+ <a href="#page_57">57</a> <i>et seq.</i>; population of,
+ <a href="#page_59">59</a>; R&ouml;les de, <a href="#page_66">66</a>;
+ harbour blocked up, <a href="#page_69">69</a><br />
+Dampierre, Guy de, <a href="#page_46">46</a><br />
+David, Gerard, <a href="#page_68">68</a><br />
+Deprysenaere, Jean of Ypres, <a href="#page_117">117</a><br />
+<i>Digues de mer</i>, construction of, <a href="#page_157">157</a>,
+ <a href="#page_158">158</a><br />
+Donatian, Church of St., built by Baldwin Bras-de-Fer,
+ <a href="#page_15">15</a>; Bertulf,
+ Provost of, <a href="#page_19">19</a>; site of,
+ <a href="#page_16">16</a>; murder of Charles the Good in,
+ <a href="#page_17">17</a>; destroyed, <a href="#page_86">86</a><br />
+Don John of Austria, <a href="#page_76">76</a>,
+ <a href="#page_79">79</a><br />
+Dordrecht, <a href="#page_30">30</a>, <a href="#page_31">31</a><br />
+Duinbergen, <a href="#page_62">62</a>, <a href="#page_166">166</a>,
+ <a href="#page_167">167</a><br />
+Dunes, Battle of the, <a href="#page_135">135</a>; scenery of,
+ <a href="#page_177">177</a> <i>et seq.</i><br />
+Dyver, the, at Bruges, <a href="#page_9">9</a>, <a href="#page_10">10</a>
+</p>
+
+<p class="index">
+Edward III., <a href="#page_61">61-63</a>, <a href="#page_66">66</a><br />
+Edward IV., <a href="#page_30">30</a><br />
+Egmont, Count, <a href="#page_110">110</a><br />
+Elias, sixth Abbot of Coxyde, <a href="#page_174">174</a><br />
+English Merchant Adventurers, <a href="#page_88">88</a><br />
+Erembalds, <a href="#page_18">18</a> <i>et seq.</i>; feud with Straetens,
+ <a href="#page_19">19</a>; destruction of, <a href="#page_23">23</a><br />
+Ethelbald, <a href="#page_14">14</a><br />
+Ethelwulf, husband of Judith, daughter of Charles the Bald,
+ <a href="#page_14">14</a><br />
+Evendyck, <a href="#page_149">149</a><br />
+Eyck, van, elder and younger, <a href="#page_16">16</a>,
+ <a href="#page_23">23</a>, <a href="#page_68">68</a>,
+ <a href="#page_57">57</a>, <a href="#page_147">147</a>
+</p>
+
+<p class="index">
+Flanders, state of, in early times, <a href="#page_7">7</a>,
+ <a href="#page_8">8</a>; invaded by Normans, <a href="#page_13">13</a>;
+ origin of title 'Count of,' <a href="#page_14">14</a>; defended by
+ Baldwin Bras-de-Fer, <a href="#page_15">15</a>; allied to England,
+ <a href="#page_62">62</a>; neutrality of, in 1340 and 1830,
+ <a href="#page_61">61</a>; invaded by French,
+ <a href="#page_67">67</a>; plain of, <a href="#page_95">95</a>
+ <i>et seq.</i>; ignorance of country people in,
+ <a href="#page_97">97</a>; smuggling between France and,
+ <a href="#page_99">99</a>; annexed to France,
+ <a href="#page_46">46</a>, <a href="#page_112">112</a>; invaded by
+ English, <a href="#page_104">104</a>; causes of disunion in,
+ <a href="#page_118">118</a>, <a href="#page_119">119</a>; ceded to
+ the Infanta Isabella, <a href="#page_136">136</a>;
+ contrast between different parts of, <a href="#page_147">147</a>,
+ <a href="#page_171">171</a>; coast of, <a href="#page_147">147</a> <i>et
+ seq.</i><br />
+Flotte, Pierre, Chancellor of France, <a href="#page_49">49</a>,
+ <a href="#page_53">53</a><br />
+Flushing, <a href="#page_69">69</a><br />
+Fox, Sir Stephen, <a href="#page_84">84</a><br />
+France, Flanders annexed to, <a href="#page_46">46</a>,
+ <a href="#page_112">112</a><br />
+France, Palais du, <a href="#page_7">7</a>, <a href="#page_73">73</a><br />
+French Consulate at Bruges, <a href="#page_88">88</a><br />
+Furnes, <a href="#page_124">124-132</a>; procession of penitents at,
+ <a href="#page_127">127</a>; Church of Ste. Walburge,
+ <a href="#page_124">124</a>; H&ocirc;tel de Ville and Palais de Justice,
+ <a href="#page_124">124</a>;
+ Church of St. Nicholas, <a href="#page_124">124</a>; Corps de Garde
+ Espagnol and Pavillon des Officiers Espagnols, <a href="#page_126">126</a>
+</p>
+
+<p class="index">
+Gand, Porte de, <a href="#page_17">17</a><br />
+Gardiner, Dr., quoted, <a href="#page_60">60</a><br />
+Gauthier de Sapignies, <a href="#page_51">51</a><br />
+Genoese merchants, house of, at Bruges, <a href="#page_88">88</a><br />
+George III., <a href="#page_84">84</a><br />
+Germany, emigrations from Flanders to, <a href="#page_150">150</a><br />
+Ghent, <a href="#page_22">22</a>, <a href="#page_48">48</a>,
+ <a href="#page_96">96</a><br />
+Ghiselhuis, <a href="#page_67">67</a><br />
+Gilliat-Smith, author of <i>The Story of Bruges</i>,
+ <a href="#page_6">6</a><br />
+Gloucester, Henry, Duke of, <a href="#page_75">75</a> <i>et seq.</i><br />
+Godshuisen, <a href="#page_74">74</a><br />
+Golden Fleece, Order of the, <a href="#page_30">30</a><br />
+Golden Spurs, Battle of the, <a href="#page_18">18</a>,
+ <a href="#page_45">45</a><br />
+Golf in Belgium, <a href="#page_163">163-166</a><br />
+'Governor of the English Colony beyond the Seas,'
+ <a href="#page_88">88</a><br />
+Grande Dame of B&eacute;guinage, <a href="#page_28">28</a><br />
+Grande Salle des Echevins at Bruges, <a href="#page_45">45</a><br />
+Great storm of thirteenth century, <a href="#page_150">150</a><br />
+Gruthuise, <a href="#page_7">7</a>, <a href="#page_31">31</a><br />
+Guildhouse of St. Sebastian at Bruges, <a href="#page_7">7</a>,
+ <a href="#page_82">82</a><br />
+Gustavus Adolphus, <a href="#page_77">77</a><br />
+Guy de Dampierre, <a href="#page_46">46</a>
+</p>
+
+<p class="index">
+Haecke, Canon van, <a href="#page_34">34</a><br />
+Halle de Drapiers at Ypres, <a href="#page_115">115</a><br />
+Halle de Paris at Bruges, <a href="#page_88">88</a><br />
+Halles at Bruges, <a href="#page_5">5</a><br />
+Hamilton, Sir James, <a href="#page_78">78</a><br />
+Hanseatic League, <a href="#page_66">66</a><br />
+Het Paradijs, <a href="#page_32">32</a><br />
+Heyst, <a href="#page_62">62</a>, <a href="#page_90">90</a>,
+ <a href="#page_153">153</a>, <a href="#page_154">154</a><br />
+Hobbema, <a href="#page_176">176</a><br />
+Hogarth, <a href="#page_41">41</a><br />
+Holland, B&eacute;guinages in, <a href="#page_27">27</a><br />
+Holy Blood, relic and chapel of, at Bruges, <a href="#page_16">16</a>,
+ <a href="#page_32">32</a>; Procession
+ of the, <a href="#page_36">36</a><br />
+Holy Cross, relic of, <a href="#page_30">30</a><br />
+Holy Sepulchre, Church of, at Jerusalem, <a href="#page_33">33</a><br />
+Hoogenblekker, <a href="#page_148">148</a><br />
+Horn, Count, <a href="#page_111">111</a><br />
+H&ocirc;tel de Bouchoute at Bruges, <a href="#page_4">4</a><br />
+H&ocirc;tel de Ville at Bruges, <a href="#page_7">7</a>,
+ <a href="#page_16">16</a>, <a href="#page_17">17</a>,
+ <a href="#page_67">67</a>, <a href="#page_91">91</a>; at Furnes,
+ <a href="#page_126">126</a><br />
+House of the Seven Towers, <a href="#page_75">75</a>,
+ <a href="#page_76">76</a>, <a href="#page_83">83</a><br />
+Hyde (Lord Clarendon), <a href="#page_77">77</a>,
+ <a href="#page_78">78</a>, <a href="#page_81">81</a>
+</p>
+
+<p class="index">
+Idesbaldus, St., <a href="#page_174">174</a><br />
+Inquisition in Flanders, <a href="#page_127">127</a><br />
+Isabella, the Infanta, <a href="#page_111">111</a>,
+ <a href="#page_126">126</a>, <a href="#page_138">138</a>
+</p>
+
+<p class="index">
+Jerusalem, Baldwin, King of, <a href="#page_33">33</a><br />
+Jerusalem, Church of, at Bruges, <a href="#page_30">30</a><br />
+Jesse, <i>Memoirs of the Court of England</i>,
+ <a href="#page_84">84</a><br />
+Jesuits at Bruges, <a href="#page_85">85</a><br />
+Joanna of Navarre, <a href="#page_46">46</a><br />
+John of Ypres, <a href="#page_8">8</a>, <a href="#page_9">9</a><br />
+Joseph II., <a href="#page_86">86</a>, <a href="#page_112">112</a><br />
+Joseph of Arimath&aelig;a, <a href="#page_33">33</a><br />
+Judith, wife of Baldwin Bras-de-Fer, <a href="#page_14">14</a>,
+ <a href="#page_124">124</a><br />
+Justice, Palais du, at Bruges, <a href="#page_16">16</a>,
+ <a href="#page_17">17</a>; at Furnes, <a href="#page_124">124</a>
+</p>
+
+<p class="index">
+Kadzand, <a href="#page_65">65</a><br />
+Kermesse, <a href="#page_101">101</a>, <a href="#page_102">102</a><br />
+King, Thomas Harper, <a href="#page_36">36</a><br />
+Knights of the Golden Fleece, <a href="#page_30">30</a><br />
+Knocke, <a href="#page_62">62</a>, <a href="#page_65">65</a>,
+ <a href="#page_156">156</a>, <a href="#page_164">164</a>,
+ <a href="#page_165">165</a>
+</p>
+
+<p class="index">
+Lac d'Amour, <a href="#page_28">28</a>, <a href="#page_29">29</a><br />
+La Panne, <a href="#page_153">153</a>, <a href="#page_156">156</a>,
+ <a href="#page_159">159</a>, <a href="#page_160">160</a><br />
+Le Coq, <a href="#page_153">153</a>, <a href="#page_162">162-164</a><br />
+<i>Legend of Montrose</i>, <a href="#page_77">77</a><br />
+Lejeusne, Mathurin, <a href="#page_128">128</a><br />
+Leliarts, <a href="#page_17">17</a>, <a href="#page_46">46</a><br />
+Leonius, <a href="#page_34">34</a><br />
+Leopold I., <a href="#page_82">82</a>, <a href="#page_151">151</a><br />
+Leopold II., <a href="#page_163">163</a><br />
+Lilly the astrologer, <a href="#page_78">78</a><br />
+Lincoln, Bishop of, <a href="#page_35">35</a><br />
+Lombaerdzyde, <a href="#page_136">136</a>, <a href="#page_140">140</a>,
+ <a href="#page_176">176</a>, <a href="#page_177">177</a><br />
+Longfellow, quoted, <a href="#page_5">5</a>,42,
+ <a href="#page_66">66</a><br />
+Loove, the, at Bruges, <a href="#page_20">20</a><br />
+Louis of Maele, <a href="#page_67">67</a>, <a href="#page_105">105</a>,
+ <a href="#page_107">107</a><br />
+Louis of Nevers, <a href="#page_61">61</a>, <a href="#page_67">67</a><br />
+Louis XIV., <a href="#page_111">111</a><br />
+Louvain, <a href="#page_27">27</a><br />
+Luxembourg, <a href="#page_111">111</a><br />
+Lyger, <a href="#page_172">172</a>
+</p>
+
+<p class="index">
+Maele, Louis of, <a href="#page_67">67</a>, <a href="#page_105">105</a>,
+ <a href="#page_107">107</a><br />
+Maison des Orientaux, <a href="#page_87">87</a><br />
+Mannaert, <a href="#page_128">128</a><br />
+Marbriers, Quai des, <a href="#page_15">15</a><br />
+Mariakerke, <a href="#page_152">152</a><br />
+Maria Theresa, <a href="#page_112">112</a><br />
+Market-Place of Bruges, <a href="#page_3">3</a>, <a href="#page_4">4</a>,
+ <a href="#page_5">5</a>, <a href="#page_9">9</a>,
+ <a href="#page_45">45</a>, <a href="#page_47">47</a><br />
+Mary, 'The Gentle,' <a href="#page_30">30</a><br />
+Matins of Bruges, <a href="#page_17">17</a>, <a href="#page_45">45</a><br />
+Maurice of Nassau, <a href="#page_135">135</a>,
+ <a href="#page_140">140</a>, <a href="#page_142">142</a><br />
+Mauritshuis at The Hague, <a href="#page_177">177</a><br />
+Maximilian, Archduke, <a href="#page_4">4</a>,
+ <a href="#page_68">68</a><br />
+Mazarin, <a href="#page_76">76</a><br />
+Melrose Abbey, <a href="#page_173">173</a><br />
+Memlinc, <a href="#page_7">7</a>, <a href="#page_68">68</a>,
+ <a href="#page_88">88</a><br />
+Meuninxhove, John van, <a href="#page_83">83</a><br />
+Michael Angelo, <a href="#page_30">30</a><br />
+Middelkerke, <a href="#page_152">152</a>, <a href="#page_153">153</a><br />
+Minnewater, <a href="#page_28">28</a>, <a href="#page_29">29</a><br />
+Miracles wrought by the Holy Blood at Bruges, <a href="#page_35">35</a><br />
+Morgarten, <a href="#page_53">53</a><br />
+Mother Superior of B&eacute;guinage, <a href="#page_28">28</a><br />
+Murray, Sir Robert, <a href="#page_77">77</a>
+</p>
+
+<p class="index">
+Napoleon at Bruges, <a href="#page_36">36</a>; return from Elba,
+ <a href="#page_113">113</a>; canal to Sluis
+ constructed by, <a href="#page_58">58</a><br />
+Navarre, Joanna of, <a href="#page_46">46</a><br />
+Neutrality of Flanders in 1340 and 1830, <a href="#page_61">61</a><br />
+Nevers, Louis of, <a href="#page_61">61</a>, <a href="#page_67">67</a><br />
+Nicholas I., Pope, <a href="#page_14">14</a><br />
+Nicholas, Sir Edward, <a href="#page_77">77</a><br />
+Nieuport, <a href="#page_135">135-144</a>; origin of,
+ <a href="#page_149">149</a>; besieged by Prince Maurice,
+ <a href="#page_140">140</a>; fallen state of,
+ <a href="#page_143">143</a><br />
+Nieuport-Bains, <a href="#page_144">144</a>, <a href="#page_147">147</a>,
+ <a href="#page_153">153</a>, <a href="#page_159">159</a><br />
+'Nieuwerck,' at Ypres, <a href="#page_115">115</a><br />
+Nimeguen, Treaty of, <a href="#page_111">111</a><br />
+Nivelles, <a href="#page_139">139</a><br />
+No&eacute;, Michael, <a href="#page_82">82</a><br />
+Normans in Flanders, <a href="#page_13">13</a><br />
+Norwich, Earl of, <a href="#page_77">77</a>, <a href="#page_78">78</a><br />
+Notre Dame, Church of, at Bruges, <a href="#page_7">7</a>,
+ <a href="#page_29">29</a>, <a href="#page_86">86</a><br />
+Notre Dame de Lombaerdzyde, <a href="#page_176">176</a><br />
+Notre Dame de Thuine, <a href="#page_108">108</a>
+</p>
+
+<p class="index">
+'Old England' at Bruges, <a href="#page_88">88</a><br />
+Oosterlingen Plaats, <a href="#page_87">87</a><br />
+Oostkerke, <a href="#page_59">59</a><br />
+Orientaux, Maison des, <a href="#page_87">87</a>; Place des,
+ <a href="#page_87">87</a><br />
+Ormonde, <a href="#page_77">77</a>, <a href="#page_81">81</a><br />
+Osburga, <a href="#page_14">14</a><br />
+Ostend, growth of, <a href="#page_142">142</a>,
+ <a href="#page_151">151</a>, <a href="#page_153">153</a>,
+ <a href="#page_154">154</a><br />
+Otlet, M. Paul, <a href="#page_154">154</a> <i>note</i><br />
+Ouden Burg, <a href="#page_7">7</a>
+</p>
+
+<p class="index">
+Palais de Justice, at Bruges, <a href="#page_16">16</a>,
+ <a href="#page_17">17</a>, <a href="#page_20">20</a>; at Furnes,
+ <a href="#page_124">124</a><br />
+Palais du Franc, <a href="#page_73">73</a><br />
+Paradijs, Het, <a href="#page_32">32</a><br />
+Parijssche Halle, <a href="#page_88">88</a><br />
+Paris, <a href="#page_159">159</a><br />
+Parma, Duke of, in Flanders, <a href="#page_109">109</a><br />
+Pauperism of Bruges, <a href="#page_74">74</a><br />
+Philip II. cedes Spanish Netherlands to his daughter,
+ <a href="#page_136">136</a><br />
+Philip III., <a href="#page_136">136</a><br />
+Philip of Valois, <a href="#page_61">61</a>,
+ <a href="#page_64">64</a><br />
+Philip the Fair, <a href="#page_45">45</a>,
+ <a href="#page_46">46</a>, <a href="#page_48">48</a>,
+ <a href="#page_49">49</a>, <a href="#page_52">52</a><br />
+Place des Orientaux, <a href="#page_87">87</a><br />
+Place du Bourg, <a href="#page_15">15</a>, <a href="#page_16">16</a>,
+ <a href="#page_17">17</a><br />
+Pont des Dunes, <a href="#page_175">175</a><br />
+Pope Clement V., <a href="#page_34">34</a>; VII.,
+ <a href="#page_105">105</a>; Boniface VIII., <a href="#page_49">49</a>;
+ Celestine III., <a href="#page_175">175</a>; Urban VI.,
+ <a href="#page_105">105</a><br />
+Poperinghe, <a href="#page_116">116</a><br />
+Porte de Damme, <a href="#page_50">50</a>, <a href="#page_58">58</a><br />
+Porte de Gand, <a href="#page_17">17</a><br />
+Porte Ste. Croix, <a href="#page_50">50</a>, <a href="#page_51">51</a><br />
+Procession of the Holy Blood at Bruges, <a href="#page_36">36</a>
+ <i>et seq.</i>; of Penitents at Furnes, <a href="#page_128">128</a><br />
+Pruyssenaere, Peter, <a href="#page_82">82</a>
+</p>
+
+<p class="index">
+Quai Espagnol, <a href="#page_87">87</a>; Long, <a href="#page_57">57</a>;
+ des Marbriers, <a href="#page_15">15</a>, <a href="#page_73">73</a>,
+ <a href="#page_75">75</a>; du Miroir, <a href="#page_57">57</a>; de
+ la Potterie, <a href="#page_57">57</a>, <a href="#page_58">58</a>,
+ <a href="#page_175">175</a>; du Rosaire, <a href="#page_9">9</a>,
+ <a href="#page_57">57</a>; Spinola, <a href="#page_57">57</a>,
+ <a href="#page_88">88</a>; Vert, <a href="#page_73">73</a>,
+ <a href="#page_128">128</a>
+</p>
+
+<p class="index">
+Rastadt, Treaty of, <a href="#page_112">112</a><br />
+Richard I., <a href="#page_174">174</a><br />
+Robinson, Mr. Wilfrid, author of <i>Bruges, an Historical Sketch</i>,
+ <a href="#page_6">6</a><br />
+Rochester, Earl of, <a href="#page_77">77</a><br />
+Rodenbach, <a href="#page_89">89</a><br />
+R&ouml;les de Damme, <a href="#page_66">66</a><br />
+Rome, flight of Baldwin and Judith to, <a href="#page_14">14</a><br />
+Roosebeke, Battle of, <a href="#page_67">67</a>,
+ <a href="#page_104">104</a><br />
+Rosaire, Quai du, <a href="#page_9">9</a><br />
+Roulers, <a href="#page_104">104</a><br />
+Route Royale, <a href="#page_159">159</a><br />
+Roya, <a href="#page_8">8</a>, <a href="#page_9">9</a>,
+ <a href="#page_10">10</a>, <a href="#page_15">15</a>,
+ <a href="#page_57">57</a>, <a href="#page_58">58</a><br />
+Rue Anglaise, in Bruges, <a href="#page_88">88</a>; de l'&Acirc;ne
+ Aveugle, <a href="#page_15">15</a>, <a href="#page_17">17</a>,
+ <a href="#page_23">23</a>; des Carmes, <a href="#page_82">82</a>;
+ Cour de Gand, <a href="#page_87">87</a>; Espagnole,
+ <a href="#page_86">86</a>; Flamande, <a href="#page_88">88</a>;
+ Haute, <a href="#page_75">75</a>; Neuve, <a href="#page_10">10</a>;
+ du Vieux Bourg, <a href="#page_7">7</a>, <a href="#page_9">9</a>,
+ <a href="#page_10">10</a>, <a href="#page_76">76</a><br />
+Ruysdael, <a href="#page_176">176</a>
+</p>
+
+<p class="index">
+Santhoven, <a href="#page_149">149</a><br />
+Scarphout, <a href="#page_150">150</a><br />
+'Schielt ende Vriendt,' <a href="#page_51">51</a><br />
+Schomberg, <a href="#page_111">111</a><br />
+Schoutteeten, <a href="#page_30">30</a>, <a href="#page_31">31</a><br />
+'Scotland,' at Bruges, <a href="#page_88">88</a><br />
+Scottish merchants at Bruges, <a href="#page_88">88</a><br />
+Scott, Sir Walter, <a href="#page_77">77</a><br />
+See-Brugge, <a href="#page_90">90</a><br />
+Senlis, <a href="#page_14">14</a><br />
+Sheppey, Isle of, <a href="#page_174">174</a><br />
+Sluis, <a href="#page_50">50</a>, <a href="#page_59">59</a>,
+ <a href="#page_65">65</a>, <a href="#page_67">67</a>,
+ <a href="#page_69">69</a><br />
+Smith, Gilliat-, <a href="#page_5">5</a>, <a href="#page_6">6</a>,
+ <a href="#page_23">23</a>, <a href="#page_24">24</a><br />
+Smet de Naeyer, Comte, <a href="#page_156">156</a><br />
+Smyrna, Consulate of, at Bruges, <a href="#page_87">87</a><br />
+Spaniards, at Bruges, <a href="#page_87">87</a>; at Furnes,
+ <a href="#page_126">126</a>, <a href="#page_127">127</a><br />
+Spanish Inquisition, <a href="#page_127">127</a><br />
+Spencer, Henry, Bishop of Norwich, <a href="#page_104">104</a><br />
+St. Andr&eacute;, Village of, <a href="#page_23">23</a><br />
+St. Basil, Church of, <a href="#page_32">32</a>,
+ <a href="#page_86">86</a><br />
+St. Bavon, <a href="#page_68">68</a><br />
+St. Bernard of Clairvaux, <a href="#page_32">32</a>,
+ <a href="#page_175">175</a><br />
+St. Donatian, Church of, <a href="#page_86">86</a><br />
+St. George, Society of, <a href="#page_81">81</a>,
+ <a href="#page_82">82</a><br />
+St. Idesbaldus, <a href="#page_174">174</a><br />
+St. John, Hospital of, <a href="#page_7">7</a><br />
+St. Martin, Church of, at Furnes, <a href="#page_108">108</a><br />
+St. Nicholas, Church of, at Furnes, <a href="#page_124">124</a><br />
+St. Omer, Jesuits of, <a href="#page_85">85</a><br />
+St. Peter's, at Ghent, <a href="#page_22">22</a><br />
+St. Sauveur, Church of, <a href="#page_7">7</a>,
+ <a href="#page_24">24</a>, <a href="#page_30">30</a>,
+ <a href="#page_37">37</a>, <a href="#page_86">86</a><br />
+St. Sebastian, Society of, at Bruges, <a href="#page_81">81</a>,
+ <a href="#page_82">82</a>, <a href="#page_84">84</a>; at Ypres,
+ <a href="#page_104">104</a><br />
+Ste. Elizabeth, Church of, <a href="#page_7">7</a>,
+ <a href="#page_29">29</a><br />
+Ste. Gudule, Church of, <a href="#page_30">30</a><br />
+Ste. Monica, Church of, <a href="#page_27">27</a><br />
+Ste. Walburge, Church of, at Bruges, <a href="#page_88">88</a>; at
+ Furnes, <a href="#page_124">124</a>, <a href="#page_174">174</a><br />
+Straetens, <a href="#page_19">19</a>, <a href="#page_20">20</a><br />
+St&uuml;bben, Herr, <a href="#page_166">166</a><br />
+Swift, Dean, <a href="#page_41">41</a><br />
+Sybilla, wife of Thierry d'Alsace, <a href="#page_33">33</a><br />
+Sydenham, Colonel, <a href="#page_77">77</a><br />
+Syria, <a href="#page_30">30</a>
+</p>
+
+<p class="index">
+Tarah, Viscount, <a href="#page_76">76</a><br />
+'Ter Streep.' <a href="#page_148">148</a><br />
+Thierry d'Alsace, <a href="#page_32">32</a> <i>et seq.</i>,
+ <a href="#page_149">149</a><br />
+'Thuindag,' <a href="#page_108">108</a><br />
+Thurloe State papers, <a href="#page_77">77</a><br />
+Titelman the Inquisitor, <a href="#page_126">126</a><br />
+Torquemada, <a href="#page_127">127</a><br />
+Tournai, <a href="#page_96">96</a><br />
+'Tower of London' at Bruges, <a href="#page_88">88</a><br />
+Turner, Sir James, <a href="#page_77">77</a>, <a href="#page_80">80</a>
+</p>
+
+<p class="index">
+Valois, Philip of, <a href="#page_64">64</a><br />
+Van Eyck, <a href="#page_16">16</a>, <a href="#page_23">23</a>,
+ <a href="#page_57">57</a>, <a href="#page_68">68</a>,
+ <a href="#page_147">147</a><br />
+Vauban, fortifies Ypres, <a href="#page_103">103</a>,
+ <a href="#page_111">111</a>, <a href="#page_112">112</a><br />
+Verhaeren, M., Belgian poet, <a href="#page_162">162</a><br />
+Vienna, Congress of, <a href="#page_113">113</a><br />
+Vieux Bourg, Rue du, <a href="#page_7">7</a>,
+ <a href="#page_9">9</a>, <a href="#page_10">10</a><br />
+Virgin and Child, Statue of, at Bruges, <a href="#page_30">30</a>
+</p>
+
+<p class="index">
+Urban VI., <a href="#page_105">105</a>
+</p>
+
+<p class="index">
+Victoria, Queen, at Bruges, <a href="#page_82">82</a>
+</p>
+
+<p class="index">
+Walburge, Ste., Church of, at Bruges, <a href="#page_88">88</a>;
+ at Furnes, <a href="#page_124">124</a>, <a href="#page_174">174</a><br />
+Walcheren, <a href="#page_69">69</a><br />
+Waterloo, Battle of, <a href="#page_36">36</a>,
+ <a href="#page_113">113</a><br />
+Weavers, Guild of, <a href="#page_47">47</a><br />
+Wenduyne, <a href="#page_149">149</a>, <a href="#page_153">153</a><br />
+Westcapelle, <a href="#page_59">59</a><br />
+Westende, village, <a href="#page_136">136</a>,
+ <a href="#page_140">140</a>; Plage, <a href="#page_156">156</a>,
+ <a href="#page_157">157</a>, <a href="#page_159">159</a>,
+ <a href="#page_160">160-162</a><br />
+William, Bishop of Ancona, <a href="#page_35">35</a>
+</p>
+
+<p class="index">
+York, Duke of, at Bruges, <a href="#page_76">76</a> <i>et seq.</i><br />
+Ypres, <a href="#page_103">103-119</a>; field preaching near,
+ <a href="#page_109">109</a>; churches sacked, <a href="#page_109">109</a>;
+ taken by Parma, <a href="#page_109">109</a>; by the Protestants,
+ <a href="#page_109">109</a>; Place du Mus&eacute;e,
+ <a href="#page_110">110</a>; besieged by Louis XIV.,
+ <a href="#page_111">111</a>; fortified by Vauban,
+ <a href="#page_103">103</a>, <a href="#page_111">111-113</a>;
+ ceded to France, <a href="#page_111">111</a>; described by Vauban in
+ 1689, <a href="#page_112">112</a>; taken by the French in 1794,
+ <a href="#page_112">112</a>; during the Hundred Days,
+ <a href="#page_113">113</a>; end of military history,
+ <a href="#page_113">113</a>; Grand Place and Cloth Hall,
+ <a href="#page_114">114</a>; monopoly of weaving linen,
+ <a href="#page_116">116</a>; manages with Bruges the Hanseatic League in
+ Flanders, <a href="#page_116">116</a>; the Nieuwerck,
+ <a href="#page_115">115</a>; riots at, <a href="#page_117">117</a>,
+ <a href="#page_118">118</a>; siege of, by English,
+ <a href="#page_104">104</a> <i>et seq.</i>; John of Ypres describes
+ early Bruges, <a href="#page_8">8</a>, <a href="#page_9">9</a><br />
+Yser, <a href="#page_135">135</a>, <a href="#page_136">136</a>
+</p>
+
+<p class="index">
+Zwijn, <a href="#page_10">10</a>, <a href="#page_60">60</a>,
+ <a href="#page_62">62</a>, <a href="#page_63">63</a>,
+ <a href="#page_69">69</a><br />
+Zuyder Zee, <a href="#page_150">150</a>
+</p>
+
+
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
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+The Project Gutenberg eBook, Bruges and West Flanders, by George W. T.
+Omond, Illustrated by Amédée Forestier
+
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+
+
+
+Title: Bruges and West Flanders
+
+
+Author: George W. T. Omond
+
+
+
+Release Date: June 23, 2006 [eBook #18670]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ISO-646-US (US-ASCII)
+
+
+***START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK BRUGES AND WEST FLANDERS***
+
+
+E-text prepared by Robert J. Hall
+
+
+
+Note: Project Gutenberg also has an HTML version of this
+ file which includes the original illustrations.
+ See 18670-h.htm or 18670-h.zip:
+ (https://www.gutenberg.org/dirs/1/8/6/7/18670/18670-h/18670-h.htm)
+ or
+ (https://www.gutenberg.org/dirs/1/8/6/7/18670/18670-h.zip)
+
+
+
+
+
+BRUGES AND WEST FLANDERS
+
+Painted by
+
+AMEDEE FORESTIER
+
+Described by
+
+G. W. T. OMOND
+
+1906
+
+
+
+
+
+
+[Illustration: A FLEMISH COUNTRY GIRL]
+
+
+
+
+Preface
+
+There is no part of Europe more wanting in what is known as 'scenery'
+than Flanders; and those who journey there must spend most of their
+time in the old towns which are still so strangely mediaeval in
+their aspect, or in country places which are worth seeing only
+because of their connection with some event in history--Nature
+has done so little for them. Thus the interest and the attraction
+of Flanders and the Flemish towns are chiefly historical. But it
+would be impossible to compress the history of such places as Bruges,
+Ypres, Furnes, or Nieuport within the limits of a few pages, except
+at the cost of loading them with a mass of dry facts. Accordingly
+the plan adopted in preparing the letterpress which accompanies Mr.
+Forestier's drawings has been to select a few leading incidents,
+and give these at some length.
+
+The Flemish School of Painting and Architecture has been so well
+and frequently described that it would have been mere affectation
+to make more than a few passing allusions to that topic.
+
+Some space has, however, been devoted to an account of the recent
+development of the Flemish littoral, which has been so remarkable
+during the last quarter of a century.
+
+
+
+
+Contents
+
+CHAPTER I
+
+THE MARKET-PLACE AND BELFRY--EARLY HISTORY OF BRUGES
+
+CHAPTER II
+
+BALDWIN BRAS-DE-FER--THE PLACE DU BOURG--MURDER OF CHARLES THE GOOD
+
+CHAPTER III
+
+THE BEGUINAGE--CHURCHES--THE RELIC OF THE HOLY BLOOD
+
+CHAPTER IV
+
+THE BRUGES MATINS--BATTLE OF THE GOLDEN SPURS
+
+CHAPTER V
+
+DAMME--THE SEA-FIGHT AT SLUIS--SPLENDOUR OF BRUGES IN THE MIDDLE
+AGES--THE FALL AND LOSS OF TRADE
+
+CHAPTER VI
+
+'BRUGES LA MORTE'
+
+CHAPTER VII
+
+THE PLAIN OF WEST FLANDERS--YPRES
+
+CHAPTER VIII
+
+FURNES--THE PROCESSION OF PENITENTS
+
+CHAPTER IX
+
+NIEUPORT--THE BATTLE OF THE DUNES
+
+CHAPTER X
+
+THE COAST OF FLANDERS
+
+CHAPTER XI
+
+COXYDE--THE SCENERY OF THE DUNES
+
+INDEX
+
+
+
+
+List of Illustrations
+
+ 1. A Flemish Country Girl
+ 2. Bruges: A Corner of the Market on the Grand' Place
+ 3. Bell-ringer Playing a Chime
+ 4. Bruges: Porte d'Ostende
+ 5. Bruges: Rue de l'Ane Aveugle (showing end of Town
+ Hall and Bridge connecting it with Palais de
+ Justice)
+ 6. Bruges: Quai du Rosaire
+ 7. Bruges: The Beguinage
+ 8. Bruges: Quai des Marbriers
+ 9. A Flemish Young Woman
+ 10. A Flemish Burgher
+ 11. Bruges: Quai du Miroir
+ 12. Bruges: View of the Palais du Franc.
+ 13. Bruges: Maison du Pelican (Almshouse)
+ 14. Bruges: Vegetable Market
+ 15. The Flemish Plain
+ 16. Duinhoek: Interior of a Farmhouse
+ 17. Adinkerque: At the Kermesse
+ 18. A Farmsteading
+ 19. Ypres: Place du Musee (showing Top Part of the
+ Belfry)
+ 20. Ypres: Arcade under the Nieuwerk
+ 21. Furnes: Grand' Place and Belfry
+ 22. Furnes: Peristyle of Town Hall and Palais de Justice
+ 23. Nieuport: Interior of Church
+ 24. Furnes: Tower of St. Nicholas
+ 25. Furnes: In Ste. Walburge's Church
+ 26. Nieuport: A Fair Parishioner
+ 27. Nieuport: Hall and Vicarage
+ 28. Nieuport: The Quay, with Eel-boats and Landing-stages
+ 29. Nieuport: The Town Hall
+ 30. Nieuport: Church Porch (Evensong)
+ 31. The Dunes: A Stormy Evening
+ 32. An Old Farmer
+ 33. La Panne: Interior of a Flemish Inn
+ 34. La Panne: A Flemish Inn--Playing Skittles
+ 35. Coxyde: A Shrimper on Horseback
+ 36. Coxyde: A Shrimper
+ 37. Adinkerque: Village and Canal
+
+
+
+
+THE MARKET-PLACE AND BELFRY--EARLY HISTORY OF BRUGES
+
+
+
+
+BRUGES AND WEST FLANDERS
+
+CHAPTER I
+
+THE MARKET-PLACE AND BELFRY--EARLY HISTORY OF BRUGES
+
+Every visitor to 'the quaint old Flemish city' goes first to the
+Market-Place. On Saturday mornings the wide space beneath the mighty
+Belfry is full of stalls, with white canvas awnings, and heaped up
+with a curious assortment of goods. Clothing of every description,
+sabots and leathern shoes and boots, huge earthenware jars, pots
+and pans, kettles, cups and saucers, baskets, tawdry-coloured
+prints--chiefly of a religious character--lamps and candlesticks,
+the cheaper kinds of Flemish pottery, knives and forks, carpenters'
+tools, and such small articles as reels of thread, hatpins, tape,
+and even bottles of coarse scent, are piled on the stalls or spread
+out on the rough stones wherever there is a vacant space. Round
+the stalls, in the narrow spaces between them, the people move
+about, talking, laughing, and bargaining. Their native Flemish
+is the tongue they use amongst themselves; but many of them speak
+what passes for French at Bruges, or even a few words of broken
+English, if some unwary stranger from across the Channel is rash
+enough to venture on doing business with these sharp-witted, plausible
+folk.
+
+At first sight this Market-Place, so famed in song, is a disappointment.
+The north side is occupied by a row of seventeenth-century houses
+turned into shops and third-rate cafes. On the east is a modern
+post-office, dirty and badly ventilated, and some half-finished
+Government buildings. On the west are two houses which were once
+of some note--the Cranenburg, from the windows of which, in olden
+times, the Counts of Flanders, with the lords and ladies of their
+Court, used to watch the tournaments and pageants for which Bruges
+was celebrated, and in which Maximilian was imprisoned by the burghers
+in 1488; and the Hotel de Bouchoute, a narrow, square building
+of dark red brick, with a gilded lion over the doorway. But the
+Cranenburg, once the 'most magnificent private residence in the
+Market-Place,' many years ago lost every trace of its original
+splendour, and is now an unattractive hostelry, the headquarters
+of a smoking club; while the Hotel de Bouchoute, turned into a
+clothier's shop, has little to distinguish it from its commonplace
+neighbours. Nevertheless,
+
+ 'In the Market-Place of Bruges stands the Belfry old and brown;
+ Thrice consumed and thrice rebuilded, still it watches o'er the town.'
+
+It redeems the Market-Place from mediocrity. How long ago the first
+belfry tower of Bruges was built is unknown, but this at least
+is certain, that in the year 1280 a fire, in which the ancient
+archives of the town perished, destroyed the greater part of an
+old belfry, which some suppose may have been erected in the ninth
+century. On two subsequent occasions, in the fifteenth and eighteenth
+centuries, the present Belfry, erected on the ruins of the former
+structure, was damaged by fire; and now it stands on the south side
+of the Market-Place, rising 350 feet above the Halles, a massive
+building of the thirteenth and fourteenth centuries, solemn,
+weather-beaten, and majestic. 'For six hundred years,' it has been
+said, 'this Belfry has watched over the city of Bruges. It has
+beheld her triumphs and her failures, her glory and her shame,
+her prosperity and her gradual decay, and, in spite of so many
+vicissitudes, it is still standing to bear witness to the genius
+of our forefathers, to awaken memories of old times and admiration
+for one of the most splendid monuments of civic architecture which
+the Middle Ages has produced.'[*]
+
+[Footnote *: Gilliat-Smith, _The Story of Bruges_, p. 169 (Dent
+and Co., London, 1901). Mr. Gilliat-Smith's book is a picturesque
+account of Bruges in the Middle Ages. Of the English works relating
+to Bruges, there is nothing better than Mr. Wilfrid Robinson's
+_Bruges, an Historical Sketch_, a short and clear history, coming
+down to modern times (Louis de Plancke, Bruges, 1899).]
+
+In olden times watchmen were always on duty on the Belfry to give
+warning if enemies approached or fire broke out in any part of the
+town, a constant source of danger when most of the houses were
+built of wood. Even in these more prosaic days the custom of keeping
+watch and ward unceasingly is still maintained, and if there is a
+fire, the alarum-bell clangs over the city. All day, from year's
+end to year's end, the chimes ring every quarter of an hour; and
+all night, too, during the wildest storms of winter, when the wind
+shrieks round the tower; and in summer, when the old town lies
+slumbering in the moonlight.
+
+[Illustration: BRUGES. A corner of the Market on the Grand' Place.]
+
+From the top of the Belfry one looks down on what is practically
+a mediaeval city. The Market-Place seems to lose its modern aspect
+when seen from above; and all round there is nothing visible but
+houses with high-pointed gables and red roofs, intersected by canals,
+and streets so narrow that they appear to be mere lanes. Above
+these rise, sometimes from trees and gardens, churches, convents,
+venerable buildings, the lofty spire of Notre Dame, the tower of
+St. Sauveur, the turrets of the Gruthuise, the Hospital of St. John,
+famous for its paintings by Memlinc, the Church of Ste. Elizabeth in
+the grove of the Beguinage, the pinnacles of the Palais du Franc,
+the steep roof of the Hotel de Ville, the dome of the Couvent des
+Dames Anglaises, and beyond that to the east the slender tower which
+rises above the Guildhouse of the Archers of St. Sebastian. The walls
+which guarded Bruges in troublous times have disappeared, though
+five of the old gateways remain; but the town is still contained
+within the limits which it had reached at the close of the thirteenth
+century.
+
+Behind the large square of the Halles, from which the Belfry rises,
+is the Rue du Vieux Bourg, the street of the Ouden Burg, or old
+fort; and to this street the student of history must first go if
+he wishes to understand what tradition, more or less authentic,
+has to say about the earliest phases in the strange, eventful past
+of Bruges. The wide plain of Flanders, the northern portion of the
+country which we now call Belgium, was in ancient times a dreary
+fenland, the haunt of wild beasts and savage men; thick, impenetrable
+forests, tracts of barren sand, sodden marshes, covered it; and
+sluggish streams, some whose waters never found their way to the
+sea, ran through it. One of these rivulets, called the Roya, was
+crossed by a bridge, to defend which, according to early tradition,
+a fort, or 'burg,' was erected in the fourth century. This fort
+stood on an islet formed by the meeting of the Roya with another
+stream, called the Boterbeke, and a moat which joined the two. We
+may suppose that near the fort, which was probably a small building
+of rough stones, or perhaps merely a wooden stockade, a few huts
+were put up by people who came there for protection, and as time
+went on the settlement increased. 'John of Ypres, Abbot of St.
+Bertin,' says Mr. Robinson, 'who wrote in the fourteenth century,
+describes how Bruges was born and christened: "Very soon pedlars
+began to settle down under the walls of the fort to supply the
+wants of its inmates. Next came merchants, with their valuable
+wares. Innkeepers followed, who began to build houses, where those
+who could not find lodging in the fort found food and shelter.
+Those who thus turned away from the fort would say, 'Let us go to
+the bridge.' And when the houses near the bridge became so numerous
+as to form a town, it kept as its proper name the Flemish word
+_Brugge_."
+
+[Illustration: BELL-RINGER PLAYING A CHIME.]
+
+The small island on which this primitive township stood was bounded
+on the south and east by the Roya, on the north by the Boterbeke,
+and on the west by the moat joining these two streams. The Roya
+still flows along between the site of the old burg and an avenue
+of lime-trees called the Dyver till it reaches the end of the Quai
+du Rosaire, when it turns to the north. A short distance beyond
+this point it is vaulted over, and runs on beneath the streets
+and houses of the town. The Rue du Vieux Bourg is built over the
+course of the Boterbeke, which now runs under it and under the Belfry
+(erected on foundations sunk deep into the bed of the stream), until
+it joins the subterranean channel of the Roya at the south-east
+corner of the Market-Place. The moat which joined these two streams
+and guarded the west side of the island was filled up long ago,
+and its bed is now covered by the Rue Neuve, which connects the
+Rue du Vieux Bourg with the Dyver.
+
+Thus the boundaries of early Bruges can easily be traced; but nothing
+remains of the ancient buildings, though we read of a warehouse,
+booths, and a prison, besides the dwelling-houses of the townsfolk.
+The elements, at least, of civic life were there; and tradition
+says that in or near the village, for it was nothing more, some
+altars of the Christian faith were set up during the seventh and
+eighth centuries. Trade, too, soon began to flourish, and grew
+rapidly as the population of the place increased. The Roya, flowing
+eastwards, fell into the Zwijn, an arm of the sea, which then ran
+up close to the town, and on which stood Damme, now a small inland
+village, but once a busy port crowded with shipping. The commercial
+life of Bruges depended on the Zwijn; and that much business was
+done before the close of the ninth century is shown by the fact
+that Bruges had then a coinage of its own.[*] It was from such
+small beginnings that this famous, 'Venice of the North' arose.
+
+[Footnote *: Gilliodts van Severen, _Bruges Ancienne et Moderne_,
+pp. 7, 8, 9.]
+
+[Illustration: BRUGES. Porte d'Ostende.]
+
+
+
+
+BALDWIN BRAS-DE-FRE--THE PLACE DU BOURG--MURDER OF CHARLES THE GOOD
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER II
+
+BALDWIN BRAS-DE-FER--THE PLACE DU BOURG--MURDER OF CHARLES THE GOOD
+
+Towards the end of the ninth and at the beginning of the tenth
+century great changes took place on the banks of the Roya, and
+the foundations of Bruges as we know it now were laid. Just as
+in the memorable years 1814 and 1815 the empire of Napoleon fell
+into fragments, and princes and statesmen hastened to readjust the
+map of Europe in their own interests, so in the ninth century the
+empire of Charlemagne was crumbling away; and in the scramble for
+the spoils, the Normans carried fire and sword into Flanders. Charles
+the Bald, King of the Franks, at this crisis called to his aid the
+strong arm of Baldwin, a Flemish chief of whose ancestry we know
+little, but who soon became famous as Baldwin Bras-de-Fer--Baldwin
+of the Iron Arm, so called because, in peace or war, he was never
+seen without his coat of mail. This grim warrior had fallen in
+love with the daughter of Charles the Bald, Judith, who had been
+already twice married, first to the Saxon King Ethelwulf (after
+the death of his first wife Osberga, mother of Alfred the Great) and
+secondly to Ethelbald, on whose death she left England and went
+to live at Senlis. Baldwin persuaded the Princess to run away with
+him; and they were married without the knowledge of her father, to
+escape whose vengeance the culprits fled to Rome. Pope Nicholas I.
+brought about a reconciliation; and Charles not only pardoned his
+son-in-law, but appointed him ruler of Flanders under the title of
+Marquis, which was afterwards changed into that of Count. It is to
+the steel-clad Baldwin Bras-de-Fer that the Counts of Flanders trace
+the origin of their title; and he was, moreover, the real founder of
+that Bruges which rose to such glory in the Middle Ages, and is
+still, though fallen from its high estate, the picturesque capital
+of West Flanders, whither artists flock to wander about amidst the
+canals and bridges, the dismantled ramparts, the narrow streets
+with their curious houses, and the old buildings which bear such
+eloquent testimony to the ruin which long ago overtook what was
+once an opulent and powerful city.
+
+When the wrath of his father-in-law had been appeased, Baldwin, now
+responsible for the defence of Flanders, came to Bruges with his
+wife, and there established his Court. But the old burg, it seems,
+was not thought capable of holding out against the Normans, who
+could easily land on the banks of the Zwijn; and Baldwin, therefore,
+set about building a new stronghold on the east side of the old
+burg, and close to it. It was surrounded partly by the main stream
+of the Roya, and partly by backwaters flowing from it. Here he
+built a fortress for himself and his household, a church dedicated
+to St. Donatian, a prison, and a 'ghiselhuis,' or house for the
+safe keeping of hostages. The whole was enclosed by walls, built
+close to the edge of the surrounding waters.
+
+The Roya is now vaulted over where it ran along the west side of
+Baldwin's stronghold, separating it from the original burg, and
+the watercourses which defended it on the north and east are filled
+up; but the stream on the south still remains in the shape of the
+canal which skirts the Quai des Marbriers, from which a bridge
+leads by a narrow lane, called the Rue de l'Ane Aveugle, under
+an arch of gilded stonework, into the open space now known as the
+Place du Bourg. Here we are at the very heart of Bruges, on the
+ground where Baldwin's stronghold stood, with its four gates and
+drawbridges, and the high walls frowning above the homes of the
+townsmen clustering round them. The aspect of the place is completely
+changed since those early days. A grove of chestnut-trees covers
+the site of the Church of St. Donatian; not a stone remains of
+Bras-de-Fer's rude palace; and instead of the prison and the
+hostage-house, there are the Hotel de Ville, now more than five
+hundred years old, from whose windows the Counts of Flanders swore
+obedience to the statutes and privileges of the town, the Palais
+de Justice, and the dark crypt beneath the chapel which shelters
+the mysterious Relic of the Holy Blood.
+
+[Illustration: BRUGES. Rue de l'Ane Aveugle (showing end of Town
+Hall and Bridge connecting it with Palais de Justice).]
+
+In summer it is a warm, quiet, pleasant spot. Under the shade of
+the trees, near the statue of Van Eyck, women selling flowers sit
+beside rows of geraniums, roses, lilies, pansies, which give a
+touch of bright colour to the scene. Artists from all parts of
+Europe set up their easels and paint. Young girls are gravely busy
+with their water-colours. Black-robed nuns and bare-footed Carmelites
+pass silently along. Perhaps some traveller from America opens his
+guide-book to study the map of a city which had risen to greatness
+long before Columbus crossed the seas. A few English people hurry
+across, and pass under the archway of the Rue de l'Ane Aveugle
+on the way to their tennis-ground beyond the Porte de Gand. The
+sunshine glitters on the gilded facade of the Palais de Justice,
+and lights up the statues in their niches on the front of the Hotel
+de Ville. There is no traffic, no noise. Everything is still and
+peaceful. The chimes, ever and anon ringing out from the huge Belfry,
+which rises high above the housetops to the west, alone break the
+silence.
+
+This is Bruges sleeping peacefully in old age, lulled to rest by
+the sound of its own carillon. But it is easy, standing there, to
+recall the past, and to fancy the scenes which took place from time
+to time throughout the long period of foreign danger and internal
+strife. We can imagine the Bourg, now so peaceful, full of armed
+men, rushing to the Church of St. Donatian on the morning when
+Charles the Good was slain; how, in later times, the turbulent
+burghers, fiery partisans of rival factions, Clauwerts shouting
+for the Flemish Lion, and Leliarts marshalled under the Lily of
+France, raged and threatened; how the stones were splashed with blood
+on the day of the Bruges Matins, when so many Frenchmen perished; or
+what shouts were raised when the Flemish host came back victorious
+from the Battle of the Golden Spurs.
+
+Though every part of Bruges--not only the Bourg, but the great
+Market-Place, and the whole maze of streets and lanes and canals
+of which it consists--has a story of its own, some of these stories
+stand out by themselves; and amongst these one of the most dramatic
+is the story of the death of Charles the Good.
+
+More than two hundred and fifty years had passed away since the
+coming of Baldwin Bras-de-Fer; Bruges had spread far beyond the
+walls of the Bourg; and Charles, who had succeeded his cousin Baldwin
+VII., was Count of Flanders. He was called 'the Good' because of
+his just rule and simple life, and still more, perhaps, because
+he clothed and fed the poor--not only in Bruges, but throughout
+all Flanders. The common people loved him, but his charities gave
+offence to the rich. He had, moreover, incurred the special enmity
+of the Erembalds, a powerful family, who, though not of noble origin
+themselves, were connected by marriage with many noble houses. They
+had supported his claim to the throne of Flanders, which had been
+disputed, and he had rewarded their services by heaping favours
+on them. But, after a time, they began to oppose the methods of
+government which Charles applied to Flanders. They resented most
+of all one of his decrees which made it unlawful for persons not
+in his service to carry arms in time of peace. This decree, which
+was pronounced in order to prevent the daily scenes of violence
+which Charles abhorred, was declared by the Erembalds to be an
+interference with Flemish liberty. It did not affect them personally,
+for they held office under the Count; but they none the less opposed
+it vehemently.
+
+While Charles was thus on bad terms with the Erembalds, a deadly
+feud existed between them and the Straetens, another notable family,
+which grew to such a height that the rival clans made open war upon
+each other, pillaging, burning, and slaying after the manner of
+these times. Charles called the leaders of both sides before him,
+and made them swear to keep the peace; but when he was at Ypres in
+the autumn of 1126, a complaint was laid before him that Bertulf,
+head of the Erembalds, who was also Provost of St. Donatian's,
+had sent one of his nephews, Burchard by name, on a raid into the
+lands of the Straetens, whose cattle he had carried off. On hearing
+of this outrage, Charles gave orders that Burchard's house should
+be pulled down, and that he should compensate the Straetens for
+their losses. The Erembalds were powerless to resist this order,
+and Burchard's house was razed to the ground.
+
+It has been said that this was only the beginning of strong measures
+which Charles was about to take against the Erembalds; but there
+is no certainty as to what his intentions really were. He then
+lived in the Loove, a mansion which he had built in the Bourg at
+Bruges, on the site now occupied by the Palais de Justice; and
+there, on his return from Ypres, he had a meeting with some of the
+Erembalds, who had been sent to plead on behalf of Burchard. As
+to what took place at this interview there is some doubt. According
+to one account, Charles drank wine with the delegates, and granted
+a free pardon to Burchard, on condition that he kept the peace.
+According to another account, his demeanour was so unbending that
+the Erembalds left his presence full of angry suspicions, which
+they communicated to their friends. Whatever may have happened,
+they were bent on mischief. Burchard was sent for, and a secret
+consultation was held, after which Burchard and a chosen few assembled
+in a house on the Bourg and arranged their plans. This was on the
+night of March 1, 1127.
+
+[Illustration: BRUGES. Quai du Rosaire.]
+
+At break of day next morning a cold, heavy mist hung low over Bruges,
+and in the Bourg everything was shrouded in darkness. But already
+some poor men were waiting in the courtyard of the Loove, to whom
+Charles gave alms on his way to early Mass in the Church of St.
+Donatian. Then he went along a private passage which led into the
+church, and knelt in prayer before the Lady Altar. It was his custom
+to give help to the needy when in church, and he had just put some
+money into the hands of a poor woman, when suddenly she called out:
+'Beware, Sir Count!' He turned quickly round, and there, sword
+in hand, was Burchard, who had stolen up the dim aisle to where
+Charles was kneeling. The next moment Burchard struck, and Charles
+fell dead upon the steps of the altar.
+
+Then followed a scene of wild confusion. The woman ran out into
+the Bourg, calling loudly that the Count was slain. In the midst
+of the uproar some of the royal household fled in terror, while
+others who entered the church were butchered by the Erembalds,
+who next attacked the Loove, and, having pillaged it, rushed over
+Bruges, slaughtering without mercy all who dared to oppose them.
+
+After some time one of the Count's servants ventured to cover the
+dead body with a winding-sheet, and to surround it with lighted
+tapers; and there it remained lying on the pavement, until at last
+the Erembalds, who were afraid to bury it in Bruges lest the sight
+of the tomb of Charles the Good should one day rouse the townsmen
+to avenge his death, sent a message to Ghent, begging the Abbot
+of St. Peter's to take it away and bury it in his own church. The
+Abbot came to Bruges, and before dawn the body of the murdered Count
+was being stealthily carried along the aisles of St. Donatian's,
+when a great crowd rushed in, declaring that the bones of Charles
+must be allowed to rest in peace at Bruges. The arches rang with
+cries, chairs were overturned, stools and candlesticks were thrown
+about, as the people, pressing and struggling round the Abbot and
+his servants, told Bertulf, with many an oath, that he must yield
+to their wishes. At last the Provost submitted, and on the morrow,
+just two days after the murder, the body of Charles was buried before
+the Lady Altar, on the very spot, it is said, where the statue of
+Van Eyck now stands under the trees in the Bourg.
+
+The triumph of the Erembalds was short, for the death of Charles
+the Good was terribly avenged by his friends, who came to Bruges
+at the head of a large force. A fierce struggle took place at the
+Rue de l'Ane Aveugle, where many were slain. The Erembalds were
+driven into the Bourg, the gates of which they shut; but an entrance
+was forced, and, after desperate fighting, some thirty of them, all
+who remained alive, were compelled to take refuge, first in the
+nave and then in the tower of the Church of St. Donatian, where,
+defending themselves with the courage of despair, they made a last
+stand, until, worn out by fatigue and hunger, they surrendered
+and came down. Bertulf the Provost, Burchard, and a few of the
+other ringleaders had fled some days before, and so escaped, for
+a time at least, the fate of their companions, who, having been
+imprisoned in a dungeon, were taken to the top of the church tower
+and flung down one by one on to the stones of the Bourg. 'Their
+bodies,' says Mr. Gilliat-Smith, 'were thrown into a marsh beyond
+the village of St. Andre, and for years afterwards no man after
+nightfall would willingly pass that way.' In the Church of St.
+Sauveur there is a costly shrine containing what are said to be the
+bones of Charles the Good, taken from their first resting-place,
+at which twice every year a festival is held in commemoration of
+his virtues.
+
+
+
+
+THE BEGUINAGE--CHURCHES--THE RELIC OF THE HOLY BLOOD
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER III
+
+THE BEGUINAGE--CHURCHES--THE RELIC OF THE HOLY BLOOD
+
+Bruges is one of the most Catholic towns in Catholic Flanders.
+Convents and religious houses of all sorts have always flourished
+there, and at present there are no less than forty-five of these
+establishments. Probably one of the most interesting to English
+people is the Couvent des Dames Anglaises, which was founded in
+1629 by the English Augustinian Nuns of Ste. Monica's Convent at
+Louvain. Its chapel, with a fine dome of the eighteenth century,
+contains a beautiful altar built of marbles brought from Egypt,
+Greece, and Persia; and amongst its possessions is the rosary of
+Catherine of Braganza (Queen of Charles II. of England), who died
+at Bruges.
+
+And then there is the Beguinage. There are Beguinages at Amsterdam
+and Breda, but with this exception of Holland, Belgium is now the
+only country in Europe where these societies, the origin of whose
+name is uncertain, are to be found. They consist of spinsters or
+widows, who, though bound by a few conventual oaths during their
+connection with the society, may return to the world. On entering
+each sister pays a sum of money to the general funds, and at first
+lives for a time along with other novices. At the end of this term
+of probation they are at liberty to occupy one of the small dwellings
+within the precincts of the Beguinage, and keep house for themselves.
+They spend their time in sewing, making lace, educating poor children,
+visiting the sick, or any form of good works for which they may
+have a taste. They are under a Mother Superior, the 'Grande Dame,'
+appointed by the Bishop of the diocese, and must attend the services
+in the church of their Beguinage. Thus the Beguine, living generally
+in a house of her own, and free to reenter the world, occupies a
+different position from the nuns of the better-known Orders, though
+so long as she remains a member of her society she is bound by the
+vows of chastity and obedience to her ecclesiastical superiors.
+
+[Illustration: BRUGES. The Beguinage.]
+
+The Beguinage at Bruges, founded in the thirteenth century, is
+situated near the Minnewater, or Lac d'Amour, which every visitor
+is taken to see. This sheet of placid water, bordered by trees,
+which was a harbour in the busy times, is one of the prettiest
+bits of Bruges; and they say that if you go there at midnight,
+and stand upon the bridge which crosses it on the south, any wish
+which you may form will certainly come to pass. It is better to go
+alone, for strict silence is necessary to insure the working of
+this charm. A bridge over the water which runs from the Lac d'Amour
+leads through a gateway into the Beguinage, where a circle of small
+houses--whitewashed, with stepped gables, and green woodwork on the
+windows--surrounds a lawn planted with tall trees. There is a view
+of the spire of Notre Dame beyond the roofs, a favourite subject for
+the painters who come here in numbers on summer afternoons. The
+Church of Ste. Elizabeth, an unpretentious building, stands on one
+side of the lawn; and within it, many times a day, the Sisters may
+be seen on their knees repeating the Offices of the Church. When
+the service is finished they rise, remove their white head-coverings,
+and return demurely to their quaint little homes.
+
+Bruges has, needless to say, many churches, but nothing which can
+be compared to the magnificent Cathedral of Antwerp, to the imposing
+front of Ste. Gudule at Brussels, or to the huge mass which forms
+such a conspicuous landmark for several leagues round Malines.
+Still, some of the churches are not without interest: the Cathedral
+of St. Sauveur, where the stalls of the Knights of the Order of
+the Golden Fleece, which was founded at Bruges, are to be seen in
+the choir, and over one of them the arms of Edward IV. of England;
+the curious little Church of Jerusalem, with its 'Holy Sepulchre,'
+an exact copy of the traditionary grave in Palestine--a dark vault,
+entered by a passage so low that one must crawl through it, and
+where a light burns before a figure which lies there wrapped in
+a linen cloth; and the Church of Notre Dame, which contains some
+treasures, such as a lovely white marble statue of the Virgin and
+Child, from the chisel of Michael Angelo; the tombs of Charles
+the Bold of Burgundy and his daughter--the 'Gentle Mary,' whose
+untimely death at Bruges in 1482, after a short married life, saved
+her from witnessing the misfortunes which clouded the last years
+of her husband, the Archduke Maximilian; and a portion of the Holy
+Cross, which came to Bruges in the fifteenth century. The story
+goes that a rich merchant, a Dutchman from Dordrecht, Schoutteeten
+by name, who lived at Bruges, was travelling through Syria in the
+year 1380. One day, when journeying with a caravan, he saw a man
+hiding something in a wood, and, following him, discovered that
+it was a box, which he suspected might contain something valuable.
+Mijnheer Schoutteeten appropriated the box, and carried it home
+from Syria to Dordrecht, where a series of miracles began to occur
+of such a nature as to make it practically certain that the box
+(or some wood which it contained, for on this point the legend is
+vague) was a part of the true Cross! In course of time Schoutteeten
+died in the odour of sanctity, having on his death-bed expressed a
+wish that the wood which he had brought from the East should be
+given to the Church of Notre Dame at Bruges. His widow consoled
+herself by taking a second husband, who, Uutenhove by name, fulfilled
+the pious request of his predecessor, and thus another relic was
+added to the large collection which is preserved in the various
+churches and religious houses of Bruges. It was brought to Flanders
+in the year 1473, and must have been a source of considerable revenue
+to the Church since then.
+
+The buildings of Notre Dame, with the well-known Gruthuise Mansion
+which adjoins them, and the singularly graceful spire, higher than
+the Belfry tower, rising from the exquisite portico called 'Het
+Paradijs,' form a very beautiful group; but, with this exception,
+there is nothing remarkable about the churches of Bruges. One of
+them, however, has a peculiar interest--the Chapelle du Saint-Sang,
+which stands in the Place du Bourg in the corner next to the Hotel
+de Ville. It is built in two stories. The lower, a dark, solemn
+chapel, like a crypt, was dedicated to St. Basil at an early period,
+and is one of the oldest buildings in Bruges. The greater part
+of the upper story does not date further back than the fifteenth
+century. But it is not the fabric itself, venerable though that is,
+but what it contains, that makes this place the Holy of Holies in
+the religious life of Bruges; for here, in a costly shrine of gold
+and silver adorned with precious stones, they guard the wonderful
+relic which was brought from Palestine in the time of the Crusaders
+by Thierry d'Alsace, Count of Flanders, and which is still worshipped
+by thousands of devout believers every year.
+
+Thierry d'Alsace, the old chroniclers tell us, visited the Holy
+Land four times, and was the leader of the Flemish warriors who,
+roused by the eloquence of St. Bernard of Clairvaux, joined the
+second Crusade in the summer of 1147. He had married Sybilla, sister
+of Baldwin, King of Jerusalem; and when the time came for his return
+to Europe, his brother-in-law and the Patriarch of Jerusalem resolved
+to reward his services by giving him a part of the most valuable relic
+which the Church in Palestine possessed, which was a small quantity
+of a red liquid, said to be blood and water, which, according to
+immemorial tradition, Joseph of Arimathaea had preserved after he
+had washed the dead body of Jesus.
+
+The earlier history of this relic is unknown, and is as obscure
+as that of the other 'Relics of the Holy Blood' which are to be
+found in various places. But there can be no doubt whatever that
+in the twelfth century the Christians at Jerusalem believed that
+it had been in existence since the day of the Crucifixion. It was,
+therefore, presented to Thierry with great solemnity in the Church
+of the Holy Sepulchre during the Christmas festivals of 1148. The
+Patriarch, having displayed the vessel which contained it to the
+people, divided the contents into two portions, one of which he
+poured into a small vial, the mouth of which was carefully sealed
+up and secured with gold wire. This vessel was next enclosed in
+a crystal tube, shut at the ends with golden stoppers, to which
+ax chain of silver was attached. Then the Patriarch gave the tube
+to Baldwin, from whose hands Thierry, kneeling on the steps of
+the altar, received it with profound emotion.[*]
+
+[Footnote *: Canon van Haecke, _Le Precieux Sang a Bruges_ (fourth
+edition), pp. 95, 96.]
+
+The Count, however, did not think his hands, which had shed so
+much human blood, worthy to convey the relic home; and he entrusted
+it to Leonius, chaplain of the Flemish Army, who hung it round
+his neck, and so carried it to Bruges, where he arrived in May,
+1150, along with Thierry, who, mounted on a white horse led by two
+barefooted monks, and holding the relic in his hand, was conducted
+in state to the Bourg, where he deposited the precious object in
+the Chapel of St. Basil, which is commonly known as the Chapel
+of the Holy Blood.
+
+After some time the relic was found to be dry, but, strange to say,
+it became liquid, we are told upon the authority of Pope Clement
+V., every Friday, 'usually at six o'clock.' This weekly miracle
+continued till about the year 1325. Since then it has never taken
+place except once, in 1388, when the vial containing the relic
+was being transferred to a new crystal tube; and on this occasion
+William, Bishop of Ancona, was astonished to see the relic turning
+redder than usual, and some drops, as of newly-shed blood, flowing
+within the vial, which he was holding in his hand. Many notable
+persons who were present, one of them the Bishop of Lincoln, testified
+to this event!
+
+Other miracles wrought through the agency of this relic are recorded.
+A child which had been born dead was taken to the shrine, and came
+to life after three days. A young girl who had suffered for twenty
+months from an issue of blood, and for whom the doctors could do
+nothing, was cured by the application of a piece of cloth which had
+been used to cover the relic. Another girl who had been paralyzed
+for a long time, being carried into the Chapel of St. Basil, was
+restored to complete strength the moment she kissed the crystal tube.
+In December, 1689, a fire broke out in the Bourg, and threatened to
+destroy the Hotel de Ville; but a priest brought forth the tube
+containing the relic, and held it up before the flames, which were
+instantly extinguished. These and many other similar miracles,
+confirmed by the oath of witnesses and received by the Church at
+the present day as authentic, make the relic an object of profound
+devotion to the people of Bruges and the peasants of the surrounding
+country, who go in crowds to bow before it twice every Friday,
+when it is exhibited for public worship.
+
+It was nearly lost on several occasions in the days of almost constant
+war, and during the French Revolution it was concealed for some
+years in the house of a private citizen. The Chapel of St. Basil
+suffered from the disturbed condition of the country, and when
+Napoleon came to Bruges in 1810 it was such a complete wreck that
+the magistrates were on the point of sweeping it away altogether.
+But Napoleon saved it, declaring that when he looked on the ruins
+he fancied himself once more amongst the antiquities of Egypt,
+and that to destroy them would be a crime. Four years after the
+Battle of Waterloo the relic was brought out from its hiding-place,
+and in 1856 the chapel was restored from the designs of two English
+architects, William Brangwyn and Thomas Harper King.[*]
+
+[Footnote *: Gilliat-Smith, _The Story of Bruges_, p. 103.]
+
+On the first Monday after the 2nd of May every year the town of
+Bruges is full of strangers, who have come to witness the celebrated
+'Procession of the Holy Blood,' which there is good reason to believe
+has taken place annually (except during the French Revolution) for
+the last 755 years.
+
+Very early in the day a Mass is celebrated in the Upper Chapel
+of the Holy Blood, which is crowded to the doors. In the crypt,
+or lower chapel, where many people are kneeling before the sacred
+images, the gloom, the silence, the bent figures dimly seen in the
+faint yellow light of a few tapers, make up a weird scene all the
+morning till about nine o'clock, when the relic, in its 'chasse,'
+or tabernacle, is carried to the Cathedral of St. Sauveur, and
+placed on the high altar, while a pontifical Mass is celebrated
+by one of the Bishops. When that is done, the procession starts
+on its march along the chief thoroughfares of the town. The houses
+are decorated with flags, and candles burn in almost every window.
+Through the narrow streets, between crowds of people standing on
+the pavements or looking down from the windows, while the church
+bells ring and wreaths of incense fill the air, bands of music,
+squadrons of cavalry, crucifixes, shrines, images, the banners
+of the parishes and the guilds, heralds in their varied dresses,
+bareheaded pilgrims from England, France, and other countries,
+pages, maidens in white, bearing palms, or crowns of thorn, or
+garlands, priests with relics, acolytes and chanting choristers,
+pass slowly along. The buffoonery of the Middle Ages, when giants,
+ballet-dancers, and mythological characters figured in the scene,
+has been abandoned; but Abraham and Isaac, King David and King
+Solomon, Joseph and the Virgin Mary, the Magi, and many saints
+and martyrs, walk in the long procession, which is closed by the
+Bishops and clergy accompanying the gorgeous shrine containing
+the small tube of something red like blood, before which all the
+people sink to the ground, and remain kneeling till it has passed.
+
+The proceedings of the day end with a benediction at an altar erected
+in front of the Hotel de Ville. The Bourg is filled from side to side
+with those who have taken part in the procession, and by thousands
+of spectators who have followed them from all parts of the town to
+witness the closing scene. The crowd gathers under the trees and
+along the sides of the square, the centre of which, occupied by
+the processionists, is a mass of colour, above which the standards
+and images which have been carried through the streets rise against
+the dark background of the Hotel de Ville and the Chapel of the
+Holy Blood. The relic is taken out of the chasse, and a priest,
+standing on the steps of the altar high above the crowd, holds it
+up to be worshipped. Everyone bows low, and then, in dead silence,
+the mysterious object is carried into the chapel, and with this
+the chief religious ceremony of the year at Bruges is brought to
+a close.
+
+There are sights in Bruges that night, within a stone's-throw of
+the Chapel of the Holy Blood, which are worth seeing, they contrast
+so strangely with all this fervour of religion.
+
+The curtain has fallen upon the drama of the day. The flags are
+furled and put aside. The vestments are in the sacristy. Shrines,
+canopies, censers, all the objects carried in the procession, have
+disappeared into the churches. The church doors are locked, and the
+images are left to stand all night without so much as one solitary
+worshipper kneeling before them. The Bourg is empty and dark, steeped
+in black shadows at the door of the chapel where the relic has
+been laid to rest. It is all quiet there, but a stroll through
+the Rue de l'Ane Aveugle and across the canal by the bridge which
+leads to the purlieus of the fish-markets brings one upon another
+scene. Every second house, if not every house, is a cafe, 'herberg,'
+or 'estaminet,' with a bar and sanded floor and some rough chairs and
+tables; and on the night of the Procession of the Holy Blood they are
+crowded to the doors. Peasants from the country are there in great
+force. For some days before and after the sacred festival the
+villagers are in the habit of coming into Bruges--whole families of
+them, father and mother, sons and daughters, all in their best finery.
+They walk through the streets, following the route by which the
+Holy Blood is carried, telling their beads and saying their prayers,
+crossing themselves, and kneeling at any image of Christ, or Madonna,
+or saint, which they may notice at the street corners. It is curious
+to watch their sunburnt faces and uncouth ways as they slouch along,
+their hands busy with their beads, and their lips never ceasing
+for a moment to mutter prayer after prayer. They follow in the
+wake of the Procession of the Holy Blood, or wait to fall upon
+their knees when it passes and receive the blessing of the Bishop,
+who walks with fingers raised, scattering benedictions from side
+to side. In the evening, before starting for home, they go to the
+cafes.
+
+As evening passes into night the sounds of music and dancing are
+heard. At the doors people sit drinking round tables placed on the
+pavement or in the rank, poisonous gutter. The hot air is heavy
+with the smell of decayed fish. Inside the cafes men and women,
+old and young, are dancing in the fetid atmosphere to jingling
+pianos or accordions. The heat, the close, sour fumes of musty
+clothing, tobacco, beer, gin, fried fish, and unwashed humanity,
+are overpowering. There are disgusting sights in all directions.
+Fat women, with red, perspiring faces and dirty fingers, still
+clutching their rosaries; tawdry girls, field-workers, with flushed
+faces, dancing with country lads, most of whom are more than half
+tipsy; ribald jokes and laughter and leering eyes; reeling, drunken
+men; maudlin affection in one corner, and jealous disputing in
+another; crying babies; beer and gin spilt on the tables; and all
+sorts of indecency and hideous details which Swift might have gloated
+over or Hogarth painted.
+
+This is how the day of the Holy Blood procession is finished by
+many of the countryfolk. The brutal cabaret comes after the prayers
+and adoration of the morning! It is a world of contrasts. But soon
+the lights are out, the shutters are put up, the last customer goes
+staggering homewards, and the Belfry speaks again, as it spoke
+when the sweet singer lay dreaming at the Fleur-de-Ble:
+
+ 'In the ancient town of Bruges,
+ In the quaint old Flemish city,
+ As the evening shades descended,
+ Low and loud and sweetly blended,
+ Low at times and loud at times,
+ And changing like a poet's rhymes,
+ Rang the beautiful wild chimes
+ From the Belfry in the market
+ Of the ancient town of Bruges.
+ Then, with deep sonorous clangour,
+ Calmly answering their sweet anger,
+ When the wrangling bells had ended,
+ Slowly struck the clock eleven,
+ And, from out the silent heaven,
+ Silence on the town descended.
+ Silence, silence everywhere,
+ On the earth and in the air,
+ Save that footsteps here and there
+ Of some burgher home returning,
+ By the street lamps faintly burning,
+ For a moment woke the echoes
+ Of the ancient town of Bruges.'
+
+[Illustration: BRUGES. Quai des Marbriers.]
+
+
+
+
+THE BRUGES MATINS--BATTLE OF THE GOLDEN SPURS
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IV
+
+THE BRUGES MATINS--BATTLE OF THE GOLDEN SPURS
+
+The visitor to Bruges is reminded, wherever he goes, of the stirring
+events which fill the chronicles of the town for several centuries.
+Opposite the Belfry, in the middle of the Market-Place, is the
+monument to Peter De Coninck and John Breidel, on which garlands
+of flowers are laid every summer, in memory of what they did when
+the burghers rose against the French in May, 1302; and amongst
+the modern frescoes which cover the walls of the Grande Salle des
+Echevins in the Hotel de Ville, with its roof of fourteenth-century
+woodwork, is one which represents the return from the Battle of
+the Golden Spurs, that famous fight in which the hardy peasantry
+of Flanders overthrew the knights of France whom Philip the Fair
+had sent to avenge the blood of the Frenchmen who had died on the
+terrible morning of the 'Bruges Matins.'
+
+The fourteenth century had opened. The town had now reached the
+limits which have contained it ever since--an irregular oval with a
+circumference of between four and five miles, surrounded by double
+ditches, and a strong wall pierced by nine fortified gateways;
+and as the town had grown, the privileges and liberties of the
+townsmen had grown likewise. Sturdy, independent, and resolved
+to keep the management of their own affairs in their own hands,
+the burghers of Bruges, like those of the other Flemish towns, had
+succeeded in establishing a system of self-government so complete
+that it roused the opposition of Guy de Dampierre, Count of Flanders,
+whose efforts to diminish the power of these communities at length
+brought about a crisis which gave Philip the Fair of France an
+excuse for interfering. The Count, having to contend both against
+his own subjects and against the ambitions of the King of France,
+fell from power, and in the end Flanders was annexed to France.
+
+Soon after this rich province had been added to his domains, Philip
+came with his wife, Joanna of Navarre, on a visit to Bruges. Already
+there were two factions in the town--the Leliarts, or French party,
+consisting chiefly of the upper classes, and the Clauwerts, or
+Flemish party, to which the mass of the people belonged. By the
+former Philip was received in royal fashion, and so magnificent
+were the dresses and jewels worn by the wives and daughters of the
+nobles and rich burgesses, who sat in the windows and balconies
+as the royal procession passed along, that the Queen was moved
+to jealousy. 'I thought,' she said, 'that I alone was Queen; but
+here in this place I have six hundred rivals.' But in the streets
+below there were sullen looks and murmurs of discontent, which
+grew louder and louder every day, when, after the departure of the
+Court, the magistrates, who belonged to the French party, proposed
+that the merchant guilds should find money to defray some of the
+expenses which had been incurred on this occasion.
+
+At this time Peter De Coninck was Dean of the Guild of Weavers,
+a man of substance, popular and eloquent. There was a tumultuous
+gathering in the Market-Place, when, standing in front of the Belfry,
+with the leaders of five-and-twenty guilds around him, he declaimed on
+liberty, and attacked the magistrates, calling on his fellow-townsmen
+to resist the taxes. The city officers, on the order of the magistrates,
+arrested De Coninck and his chief supporters, and hurried them to the
+prison in the Bourg. But in a few hours the mob forced an entrance
+and released them. The signal for revolt had been given, and for
+some months Bruges, like the rest of Flanders, was in disorder. De
+Coninck, who had been joined by John Breidel, Dean of the Guild of
+Butchers, was busy rousing the people in all parts of the country.
+He visited Ghent, amongst other places, and tried to persuade the
+magistrates that if Ghent and Bruges united their forces the whole
+Flemish people would rise, crush the Leliarts, and expel the French.
+But the men of Ghent would not listen to him, and he returned to
+Bruges. Here, too, he met with a rebuff, for the magistrates, having
+heard that Jacques de Chatillon, whom Philip had made Governor of
+Flanders, was marching on the town, would not allow him to remain
+amongst them. He went to Damme, and with him went, not only Breidel,
+but 5,000 burghers of the national party, stout Clauwerts, who had
+devoted themselves to regaining the liberty of their country.
+
+[Illustration: A FLEMISH YOUNG WOMAN]
+
+When Chatillon rode up to the walls of Bruges and demanded entrance
+the magistrates agreed to open the gates, on condition that he
+brought with him only 300 men-at-arms. But he broke his word, and
+the town was entered by 2,000 knights, whose haughty looks and
+threatening language convinced the people that treachery was intended.
+It was whispered in the Market-Place that the waggons which rumbled
+over the drawbridges carried ropes with which the Clauwerts who
+had remained in the town were to be hanged; that there was to be
+a general massacre, in which not even the women and children would
+be spared; and that the Frenchmen never unbuckled their swords
+or took off their armour, but were ready to begin the slaughter
+at any moment. It was a day of terror in Bruges, and when evening
+came some of the burghers slipped out, made their way to Damme,
+and told De Coninck what was passing in the town.
+
+That night Chatillon gave a feast to his chief officers, and amongst
+his guests was Pierre Flotte, Chancellor of France, perhaps the
+ablest of those jurists by whose evil councils Philip the Fair
+was encouraged in the ideas of autocracy which led him to make
+the setting up of a despotism the policy of his whole life. With
+Flotte--'that Belial,' as Pope Boniface VIII. once called him--and
+the rest, Chatillon sat revelling till a late hour. The night wore
+on; De Chatillon's party broke up, and went to rest; the weary
+sentinels were half asleep at their posts; and soon all Bruges
+was buried in silence. Here and there lights twinkled in some of
+the guild-houses, where a few of the burghers sat anxiously waiting
+for what the morrow might bring forth, while others went to the
+ramparts on the north, and strained their eyes to see if help was
+coming from Damme.
+
+At early dawn--it was Friday, May 18, 1302--the watchers on the
+ramparts saw a host of armed men rapidly approaching the town. They
+were divided into two parties, one of which, led by De Coninck,
+made for the Porte Ste. Croix, while the other, under Breidel,
+marched to the Porte de Damme, a gateway which no longer exists,
+but which was then one of the most important entrances, being that
+by which travellers came from Damme and Sluis. Messengers from
+the ramparts ran swiftly through the streets, in which daylight
+was now beginning to appear, and spread the news from house to
+house. Silently the burghers took their swords and pikes, left
+their homes, and gathered in the Market-Place and near the houses
+in which the French were sleeping. The French slept on till, all
+of a sudden, they were wakened by the tramp of feet, the clash
+of arms, and shouts of 'Flanders for the Lion!' Breidel had led
+his men into the town, and they were rushing through the streets
+to where Chatillon had taken up his quarters, while De Coninck,
+having passed through the Porte Ste. Croix, was marching to the
+Bourg. The Frenchmen, bewildered, surprised, and only half awake,
+ran out into the streets. The Flemings were shouting 'Schilt ende
+Vriendt! Schilt ende Vriendt!'[*] and every man who could not pronounce
+these words was known to be a Frenchman, and slain upon the spot.
+Some fled to the gates; but at every gate they found a band of
+guards, who called out 'Schilt ende Vriendt!' and put them to the
+sword.
+
+[Footnote *: 'Shield and Friend!']
+
+All that summer's morning, and on throughout the day, the massacre
+continued. Old men, women, and children hurled stones from the
+roofs and windows down upon the enemy. Breidel, a man of great
+strength, killed many with his own hand, and those whom he wounded
+were beaten to death where they fell by the apprentices with their
+iron clubs. In the Market-Place, close to where the monument to De
+Coninck and Breidel stands, a party of soldiers, under a gallant
+French knight, Gauthier de Sapignies, made a stand; but they were
+overpowered and slaughtered to the last man. Chatillon tried to
+rally his forces, but the surprise had been too complete, and,
+disguising himself in the cassock of a priest, he hid, in company
+with Chancellor Flotte, till it was dark, when they managed to
+escape from the town. By this time the carnage had ceased; the
+walls of the houses and the gutters ran with blood; and the burghers
+of Bruges had done their work so thoroughly that 2,000 Frenchmen
+lay dead upon the streets.
+
+But the final reckoning with France was yet to come. Then Chatillon
+reached Paris and told his master the direful story of the Bruges
+Matins, Philip swore revenge; and a few weeks later an army 40,000
+strong invaded Flanders, under the Comte d'Artois, with whom rode
+also Chatillon, Flotte, and many nobles of France. The Flemings went
+to meet them--not only the burghers of Bruges, led by De Coninck
+and Breidel, marching under the banners of their guilds, but men
+from every part of Flanders--and on July 11, near Courtrai, the
+Battle of the Golden Spurs was fought.
+
+[Illustration: A FLEMISH BURGHER]
+
+The ground was marshy, with a stream and pools of water between
+the two armies; and just as the Scots at Bannockburn, twelve years
+afterwards, prepared pitfalls for the heavy cavalry of England, so
+the Flemings laid a trap for the French knights by cutting down
+brushwood and covering the water. The horsemen, clad in cumbrous
+armour, charged, the brushwood gave way, and most of them sank
+into the water. The Comte d'Artois got clear, but was beaten to
+the ground and killed. The Chancellor Flotte, who had boasted that
+he would bring the people of Bruges to their knees, was trampled to
+death. Chatillon died too; and when, at last, a long day's fighting
+came to an end, the Flemings had gained a complete victory. By this
+battle, which took its name from the thousands of golden spurs
+which were torn from the French knights who fell, the victors
+secured--for a time, at least--the liberty of their country, and
+the memory of it was for many a day to Flanders what the memory
+of Bannockburn was to Scotland, or of Morgarten to Switzerland.
+
+
+
+
+DAMME--THE SEA-FIGHT AT SLUIS--SPLENDOUR OF BRUGES IN THE MIDDLE
+AGES--THE FALL AND LOSS OF TRADE
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER V
+
+DAMME--THE SEA-FIGHT AT SLUIS--SPLENDOUR OF BRUGES IN THE MIDDLE
+AGES--THE FALL AND LOSS OF TRADE
+
+Damme, where the patriots mustered on the eve of the Bruges Matins,
+is within a short hour's stroll from the east end of the town.
+The Roya, which disappears from view, as we have already seen,
+opposite the Quai du Rosaire, emerges from its hidden course at
+the west end of the Quai du Miroir, where the statue of Jan van
+Eyck stands near the door of the building now used as a public
+library. This building was once the Customs House of Bruges,
+conveniently situated in the neighbourhood of the Market-Place, and
+on the side of the Roya, which thence stretches eastwards between
+the Quai du Miroir and the Quai Spinola for a few hundred yards,
+and then turns sharply to the north, and continues between the
+Quai Long and the Quai de la Potterie, which are built in rambling
+fashion on either side of the water. Some of the houses are old,
+others of no earlier date, apparently, than the seventeenth or
+eighteenth centuries; some large and well preserved, and some mere
+cottages, half ruinous, with low gables and faded yellow fronts,
+huddled together on the rough causeway, alongside of which are
+moored canal-boats with brown hulls and deck-houses gay with white
+and green paint. At the end of the Quai de la Potterie is the modern
+Bassin de Commerce, in which the Roya loses itself, the harbour for
+the barges and small steamers which come by the canal connecting
+Ostend with Bruges and Ghent; and near this was, in ancient days,
+the Porte de Damme, through which Breidel and his followers burst
+on that fateful morning in May 600 years ago.
+
+To the right of the Bassin a broad canal, constructed by Napoleon
+in 1810, extends in a straight line eastwards, contained within
+dykes which raise it above a wide expanse of level meadow-lands
+intersected by ditches, and dotted here and there by the white-walled
+cottages with red roofs and green outside shutters which are so
+typical of Flemish scenery. About two miles out of Bruges one comes
+in sight of a windmill perched on a slope at the side of the canal,
+a square church-tower, a few houses, and some grassy mounds, which
+were once strong fortifications. Even the historical imagination,
+which everyone who walks round Bruges must carry with him, is hardly
+equal to realizing that this was once a bustling seaport, with a
+harbour in which more than a hundred merchant ships, laden with
+produce from all parts of the world, were sometimes lying at the
+same time. In those busy times Damme, they say, contained 50,000
+inhabitants; now there are only about 1,100.
+
+Beyond Damme the canal winds on through the same flat landscape,
+low-lying, water-logged, with small farmhouses and scanty trees, and
+in the distance, on the few patches of higher ground, the churches
+of Oostkerke and Westcapelle. At last, soon after passing the Dutch
+frontier, the canal ends in a little dock with gray, lichen-covered
+sides; and this is Sluis, a dull place, with a few narrow streets, a
+market-place, two churches, and a belfry of the fourteenth century.
+It is quite inland now, miles from the salt water; and from the
+high ramparts which still surround it the view extends to the north
+across broad green fields, covering what was once the bed of the
+sea, in the days when the tide ebbed and flowed in the channel of
+the Zwijn, over which ships passed sailing on their way to Bruges.
+But any English traveller who, having gone a little way out of the
+beaten track of summer tourists, may chance to mount the ramparts,
+and look down upon the fields which stretch away to the shores of
+the North Sea and the estuary of the Scheldt, and inland beyond
+Damme to the Belfry and the spires of Bruges, is gazing on the
+scene of a great event in the naval history of England.
+
+Here, on what is now dry land, on the morning of June 24, 1340,
+800 ships of war, full of armed men--35,000 of them--were drawn up
+in line of battle; and further out to sea, beyond the entrance of
+the Zwijn, the newly-risen sun was shining on the sails of another
+fleet which was manoeuvring in the offing.
+
+[Illustration: BRUGES. Qua du Miroir]
+
+'In the cities of Flanders,' says Dr. Gardiner, 'had arisen
+manufacturing populations which supplied the countries round with
+the products of the loom. To the Ghent and Bruges of the Middle
+Ages England stood in the same relation as that which the Australian
+colonies hold to the Leeds and Bradford of our own day. The sheep
+which grazed over the wide, unenclosed pasture-lands of our island
+formed a great part of the wealth of England, and that wealth depended
+entirely on the flourishing trade with the Flemish towns in which
+English wool was converted into cloth.' When, therefore, Edward
+III. claimed the throne of France, and the Hundred Years' War began,
+it was of vital importance to the trade of Flanders and England
+that the merchants of the two countries should maintain friendly
+relations with each other. But Philip of Valois had persuaded the
+Count of Flanders, Louis de Nevers, to order the arrest of all
+the English in Flanders, and Edward had retaliated by arresting
+all the Flemings who were in England, and forbidding the export of
+English wool to Flanders. The result was that the weavers of Bruges
+and the other manufacturing towns of Flanders found themselves on
+the road to ruin; and, having no interest in the question at issue
+between the Kings of France and England, apart from its effect
+on their commercial prosperity, the burghers of Bruges, Ghent,
+and Ypres, under the leadership of the famous Jacob van Artevelde
+(anticipating, as one of the modern historians of Bruges has noticed,
+what the Great Powers did for Belgium in 1830[*]), succeeded in
+securing, with the assent of Philip, the neutrality of Flanders.
+The French King, however, did not keep faith with the Flemings,
+but proceeded to acts of aggression against them, and a league
+against France was formed between England and Flanders.
+
+[Footnote *: Robinson, _Bruges, an Historical Sketch_, p. 107.]
+
+In June, 1340, Edward, who was then in England, hearing that an
+immense number of French ships of war were at anchor in the Zwijn,
+set sail to give them battle with a squadron of 300 vessels. The
+English fleet anchored off the coast between Blankenberghe and
+Heyst on the evening of June 23, and from the top of the dunes the
+English scouts saw in the distance the masts of the French ships
+in the Zwijn.
+
+As soon as there was light next morning, the English weighed anchor
+and sailed along the coast to the east; past lonely yellow sands,
+which have swarmed during recent years with workmen toiling at the
+construction of the immense harbour of See-Brugge, which is to
+be the future port of Bruges; past what was then the small fishing
+hamlet of Heyst; past a range of barren dunes, amongst which to-day
+Duinbergen, the latest of the Flemish watering-places, with its
+spacious hotel and trim villas, is being laid out; past a waste of
+storm-swept sand and rushes, on which are now the digue of Knocke,
+a cluster of hotels and crowded lodging-houses, and a golf-course;
+and so onwards till they opened the mouth of the Zwijn, and saw
+the French ships crowding the entrance, 'their masts appearing to
+be like a great wood,' and beyond them the walls of Sluis rising
+from the wet sands left by the receding tide.
+
+It was low-water, and while waiting for the turn of the tide the
+English fleet stood out to sea for some time, so that Nicholas
+Behuchet, the French Admiral, began to flatter himself that King
+Edward, finding himself so completely outnumbered, would not dare
+to risk fighting against such odds. The odds, indeed, were nearly
+three to one against the English seamen; but as soon as the tide
+began to flow they steered straight into the channel, and, Edward
+leading the van, came to close quarters, ship to ship. The famous
+archers of England, who six years later were to do such execution
+at Crecy, lined the bulwarks, and poured in a tempest of arrows so
+thick that men fell from the tops of the French ships like leaves
+before a storm. The first of the four lines in which Behuchet had
+drawn up his fleet was speedily broken, and the English, brandishing
+their swords and pikes, boarded the French ships, drove their crews
+overboard, and hoisted the flag of England. King Edward was wounded,
+and the issue may have been doubtful, when suddenly more ships,
+coming from the North of England, appeared in sight, and hordes
+of Flemings from all parts of Flanders, from the coast, and even
+from inland towns so far away as Ypres,[*] came swarming in boats
+to join in the attack. This decided the fate of the great battle,
+which continued till sunset. When it ended, the French fleet had
+ceased to exist, with the exception of a few ships which escaped
+when it was dark. The Flemings captured Behuchet, and hung him
+then and there. Nearly 30,000 of his men perished, many of whom
+were drowned while attempting to swim ashore, or were clubbed to
+death by the Flemings who lined the beach, waiting to take vengeance
+on the invaders for having burned their homesteads and carried
+off their flocks. The English lost two ships and 4,000 men; but
+the victory was so complete that no courtier was bold enough to
+carry the news to King Philip, who did not know what had befallen
+his great fleet till the Court jester went to him, and said, 'Oh!
+the English cowards! the English cowards! They had not the courage
+to jump into the sea as our noble Frenchmen did at Sluis.'
+
+[Footnote *: Vereecke, _Histoire Militaire de la Ville d'Ypres_,
+p. 36.]
+
+It is strange to think that Flemish peasants work, and cattle feed,
+and holiday visitors from Knocke, or Sluis, or Kadzand ramble about
+dry-shod where the waves were rolling in on that midsummer's morning,
+and that far beneath the grass the timbers of so many stout ships
+and the bones of so many valiant seamen have long since mouldered
+away. And it is also strange to think, when wandering along the
+canals of Bruges, where now the swans glide silently about in the
+almost stagnant water which laps the basements of the old houses,
+how in the fourteenth and fifteenth centuries ships of every nation
+carried in great bales of merchandise, and that rich traders stored
+them in warehouses and strong vaults, which are now mere coal-cellars,
+or the dark and empty haunts of the rats which swarm in the canals.
+
+'There is,' says Mr. Robinson, 'in the National Library at Paris a
+list of the kingdoms and cities which sent their produce to Bruges
+at that time. England sent wool, lead, tin, coal, and cheese; Ireland
+and Scotland, chiefly hides and wool; Denmark, pigs; Russia, Hungary,
+and Bohemia, large quantities of wax; Poland, gold and silver;
+Germany, wine; Liege, copper kettles; and Bulgaria, furs.' After
+naming many parts of Europe, Asia, and Africa, that sent goods,
+the manuscript adds: 'And all the aforesaid realms and regions
+send their merchants with wares to Flanders, besides those who
+come from France, Poitou, and Gascony, and from the three islands
+of which we know not the names of their kingdoms.' The trade of
+Bruges was enormous. People flocked there from all quarters.
+
+ 'Lombard and Venetian merchants with deep-laden argosies;
+ Ministers from twenty nations; more than royal pomp and ease.'
+
+We read of 150 ships entering in one day, and of German merchants
+buying 2,600 pieces of cloth, made by Flemish weavers, in a morning's
+marketing. A citizen of Bruges was always at the head of the Hanseatic
+League, and maintained the rights of that vast commercial society
+under the title of 'Comte de la Hanse.' Merchant princes, members
+of the Hanse, lived here in palaces. Money-changers grew rich.
+Edward III. borrowed from the Bardi at Bruges on the security of
+the Crown jewels of England. Contracts of insurance against maritime
+risks were entered into from an early period, and the merchant
+shipping code which regulated traffic by sea was known as the 'Roeles
+de Damme.'[*] There were twenty consulates at one time in Bruges,
+and the population of the town is said, though it is difficult to
+believe that this is not an exaggeration, to have been more than
+200,000 before the middle of the fourteenth century.
+
+[Footnote *: Gilliodts van Severen, _Bruges Ancienne et Moderne_,
+p. 14.]
+
+Six years after the Battle of Sluis, Louis of Nevers was killed at
+Crecy, and his son, Louis of Maele, reigned in his stead as Count
+of Flanders. He was a Leliart to the core, and his reign of nearly
+forty years, one long struggle against the liberties of his people,
+witnessed the capture of Bruges by Philip van Artevelde, the invasion
+of Flanders by the French, the defeat of the Nationalists, and the
+death of Van Artevelde on the field of Roosebeke. Nevertheless,
+during this period and after it Bruges grew in beauty and in wealth.
+The Hotel de Ville, without the grandeur of the Hotel de Ville at
+Brussels, but still a gem of mediaeval architecture, was built on
+the site of the old 'Ghiselhuis' of Baldwin Bras-de-Fer. Other noble
+buildings, rich in design and beautiful in all their outlines, and
+great mansions, with marble halls and ceilings of exquisitely carved
+woodwork, rose on every side; towers and pinnacles, shapely windows
+and graceful arches, overhung the waterways; luxury increased; in
+the homes of the nobles and wealthy merchants were stores of precious
+stones, tapestries, silk, fine linen, cloth of gold; the churches
+and many buildings gleamed with gilded stone and tinted glass and
+brilliant frescoes. Art flourished as the town grew richer. The
+elder and the younger Van Eyck, Gerard David, and Memlinc, with
+many others before and after them, were attracted by its splendour,
+as modern painters have been attracted by its decay; and though the
+'Adoration of the Immaculate Lamb' hangs in the choir of St. Bavon
+at Ghent, the genius which coloured that matchless altar-piece
+found its inspiration within the walls of Bruges.
+
+The history of Bruges for many long years, especially under the
+rule of the House of Burgundy, was, in the midst of war, turmoil,
+and rebellion, the history of continuous progress. But all this
+prosperity depended on the sea. So long as the Zwijn remained open,
+neither war nor faction, not even the last great rising against
+the Archduke Maximilian, which drove away the foreign merchants,
+most of whom went to Antwerp, and so impoverished the town that
+no less than 5,000 houses were standing empty in the year 1405,[*]
+could have entirely ruined Bruges. These disasters might have been
+retrieved if the channel of communication with Damme and Sluis had
+not been lost; but for a long time the condition of this important
+waterway had been the cause of grave anxiety to the people of Bruges.
+The heavy volume of water which poured with every ebbing tide down
+the Scheldt between Flushing and Breskens swept past the island of
+Walcheren, and spread out into the North Sea and down the English
+Channel, leaving the mud it carried with it on the sands round the
+mouth of the Zwijn, which itself did not discharge a current strong
+enough to prevent the slow but sure formation of a bank across its
+entrance. Charters, moreover, had been granted to various persons,
+under which they drained the adjoining lands, and gradually reclaimed
+large portions from the sea. The channel, at no time very deep,
+became shallower, narrower, and more difficult of access, until at
+last, during the second half of the fifteenth century, the passage
+between Sluis and Damme was navigable only by small ships. Soon
+the harbour at Damme was nearly choked up with sand. Many schemes
+were tried in the hope of preserving the Zwijn, but the sea-trade
+of Bruges dwindled away to a mere nothing, and finally disappeared
+before the middle of the sixteenth century.
+
+[Footnote *: Gilliodts van Severen, p. 25.]
+
+And so Bruges fell from greatness. There are still some traces of
+the ancient bed of the Zwijn amongst the fields near Coolkerke,
+a village a short distance to the north of Bruges--a broad ditch
+with broken banks, and large pools of slimy water lying desolate
+and forlorn in a wilderness of tangled bushes. These are now the
+only remains of the highway by which the 'deep-laden argosies'
+used to enter in the days of old.
+
+
+
+
+'BRUGES LA MORTE'
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VI
+
+'BRUGES LA MORTE'
+
+They call it 'Bruges la Morte,' and at every turn there is something
+to remind us of the deadly blight which fell upon the city when
+its trade was lost. The faded colours, the timeworn brickwork, the
+indescribable look of decay which, even on the brightest morning,
+throws a shade of melancholy over the whole place, lead one to
+think of some aged dame, who has 'come down in the world,' wearing
+out the finery of better days. It is all very sad and pathetic,
+but strangely beautiful, and the painter never lived who could
+put on canvas the mellow tints with which Time has clothed these
+old walls, and thus veiled with tender hand the havoc it has made.
+To stand on the bridge which crosses the canal at the corner of
+the Quai des Marbriers and the Quai Vert, where the pinnacles of
+the Palais du Franc and the roof of the Hotel de Ville, with the
+Belfry just showing above them, and dull red walls rising from
+the water, make up a unique picture of still-life, is to read a
+sermon in stones, an impressive lesson in history.
+
+The loss of trade brought Bruges face to face with the 'question
+of the unemployed' in a very aggravated form. How to provide for
+the poor became a most serious problem, and so many of the people
+were reduced to living on charity that almshouses sprang up all
+over the town. God's Houses ('Godshuisen') they called them, and
+call them still. They are to be found in all directions--quaint
+little places, planted down here and there, each with a small chapel
+of its own, with moss-grown roofs and dingy walls, and doors that
+open on to the uneven cobbles. Every stone of them spells pauperism.
+The Church does much towards maintaining these shelters for the
+poor--perhaps too much, if it is true that there are 10,000 paupers
+in Bruges out of a population of about 55,000. There is a great deal
+of begging in the streets, and a sad lack of sturdy self-respect
+amongst the lower class, which many think is caused by the system
+of doles, for which the Church is chiefly responsible. Bruges might
+not have been so picturesque to-day if her commerce had survived;
+but the beauty of a town is dearly purchased at the cost of such
+degradation and loss of personal independence.
+
+[Illustration: BRUGES. View of the Palais du Franc.]
+
+It was not only the working class which suffered. Many rich families
+sank into poverty, and their homes, some of which were more like
+palaces than private houses, had to be dismantled. The fate of
+one of these lordly mansions is connected with an episode which
+carries us back into the social life of Bruges in the middle of
+the seventeenth century. On the right side of the Rue Haute, as
+one goes from the Place du Bourg, there is a high block containing
+two large houses, Nos. 6 and 8, of that street. It is now a big,
+plain building without a trace of architectural distinction; but
+in the seventeenth century it was a single mansion, built about
+the year 1320, and was one of the many houses with towers which
+gave the Bruges of that time almost the appearance of an Oriental
+city. It was called the House of the Seven Towers, from the seven
+pinnacles which surmounted it; and at the back there was a large
+garden, which extended to the canal and Quai des Marbriers.
+
+In April, 1656, the 'tall man above two yards high, with dark brown
+hair, scarcely to be distinguished from black,' for whom the Roundheads
+had searched all England after the Battle of Worcester, found his
+way to Bruges, with his brother Henry, Duke of Gloucester, and
+the train of Royalists who formed their Court. For nearly three
+years after Worcester, Charles II. had lived in France; but in
+July, 1654, the alliance between Cromwell and Mazarin drove him to
+Germany, where he remained till Don John of Austria became Governor
+of the Spanish Netherlands. Thereupon the prospect of recovering
+the English throne by the assistance of Spain led him to remove
+his Court, which had been established for some time at Cologne,
+to Flanders. He arrived at Bruges on April 22, 1656. His brother
+James, Duke of York, and afterwards King of England, held a commission
+in the French army, and Mazarin offered him a command in Italy.
+Charles, however, requested him to leave the French army, and enter
+the service of Spain. At first James refused; but by the mediation
+of their sister, the Princess of Orange, he was persuaded to do
+as his brother wished, and join the Court at Bruges. The Irish
+Viscount Tarah received Charles, when he first arrived, in his
+house in the Rue du Vieux Bourg, and there gave him, we read in
+local history, 'une brillante hospitalite.' But in the beginning
+of June the Court took up its quarters in the House of the Seven
+Towers.
+
+During his sojourn in Flanders, Charles was carefully watched by
+the secret service officers of the Commonwealth Government, who
+sent home reports of all he did. These reports, many of which are
+in the Thurloe State Papers and other collections, contain some
+curious details about the exiled Court.
+
+There never was a more interesting 'English colony' at Bruges than
+at that time. Hyde, who received the Great Seal at Bruges, was there
+with Ormonde and the Earls of Bristol, Norwich, and Rochester.
+Sir Edward Nicholas was Secretary of State; and we read of Colonel
+Sydenham, Sir Robert Murray, and 'Mr. Cairless', who sat on the
+tree with Charles Stewart after Worcester fight. Another of the
+exiles at Bruges was Sir James Turner, the soldier of fortune,
+who served under Gustavus Adolphus, persecuted the Covenanters
+in Scotland, and is usually supposed to have been the original
+of Dugald Dalgetty in Sir Walter Scott's _Legend of Montrose_.
+A list of the royal household is still preserved at Bruges. It
+was prepared in order that the town council might fix the daily
+allowance of wine and beer which was to be given to the Court,
+and contains the names of about sixty persons, with a note of the
+supply granted to each family.
+
+A 'Letter of Intelligence' (the report of a spy), dated from Bruges
+on September 29, 1656, mentions that Lilly, the astrologer of London,
+had written to say that the King would be restored to the throne
+next year, and that all the English at Bruges were delighted. But
+in the meantime they were very hard up for ready money. Ever since
+leaving England Charles and his followers had suffered from the
+most direful impecuniosity. We find Hyde declaring that he has
+'neither shoes nor shirt.' The King himself was constantly running
+into debt for his meals, and his friends spent many a hungry day
+at Bruges. If by good luck they chanced to be in funds, one meal a
+day sufficed for a party of half a dozen courtiers. If it was cold
+they could not afford to purchase firewood. The Earl of Norwich
+writes, saying that he has to move about so as to get lodgings on
+credit, and avoid people to whom he owes money. Colonel Borthwick,
+who claims to have served the King most faithfully, complains that he
+is in prison at Bruges on suspicion of disloyalty, has not changed
+his clothes for three years, and is compelled by lack of cash to go
+without a fire in winter. Sir James Hamilton, a gentleman-in-waiting,
+gets drunk one day, and threatens to kill the Lord Chancellor. He
+is starving, and declares it is Hyde's fault that the King gives
+him no money. He will put on a clean shirt to be hanged in, and
+not run away, being without so much as a penny. Then we have the
+petition of a poor fencing-master. 'Heaven,' he writes piteously,
+'hears the groans of the lowest creatures, and therefore I trust that
+you, being a terrestrial deity, will not disdain my supplication.'
+He had come from Cologne to Bruges to teach the royal household,
+and wanted his wages, for he and his family were starving.
+
+[Illustration: BRUGES. Maison du Pelican (Almshouse).]
+
+Don John of Austria visited Charles at Bruges, and an allowance
+from the King of Spain was promised, so that men might be levied
+for the operations against Cromwell; but the payments were few
+and irregular. 'The English Court,' says a letter of February,
+1657, 'remains still at Bridges [Bruges], never in greater want,
+nor greater expectations of money, without which all their levies
+are like to be at a stand; for Englishmen cannot live on bread
+alone.'
+
+A 'Letter of Intelligence' sent from Sluis says that Charles is 'much
+loocked upon, but littell respeckted.' And this is not wonderful if
+the reports sent home by the Commonwealth agents are to be trusted.
+One of the spies who haunted the neighbourhood of Bruges was a Mr.
+Butler, who writes in the winter of 1656-1657: 'This last week
+one of the richest churches in Bruges was plundered in the night.
+The people of Bruges are fully persuaded that Charles Stewart's
+followers have done it. They spare no pains to find out the guilty,
+and if it happen to light upon any of Charles Stewart's train, it
+will mightily incense that people against them.... There is now
+a company of French comedians at Bruges, who are very punctually
+attended by Charles Stewart and his Court, and all the ladies there.
+Their most solemn day of acting is the Lord's Day. I think I may
+truly say that greater abominations were never practised among
+people than at this day at Charles Stewart's Court. Fornication,
+drunkenness, and adultery are esteemed no sins amongst them; so I
+persuade myself God will never prosper any of their attempts.'[*]
+In another letter we read that once, after a hunting expedition,
+Charles and a gentleman of the bedchamber were the only two who
+came back sober. Sir James Turner was mad when drunk, 'and that
+was pretty often,' says Bishop Burnet.
+
+[Footnote *: Letter from Mr. J. Butler, Flushing, December 2, 1656,
+Thurloe State Papers, V., 645.]
+
+But, of course, it was the business of the spies to blacken the
+character of Charles; and there can be little doubt that, in spite
+of his poverty and loose morals, he was well liked by the citizens
+of Bruges, who, notwithstanding a great deal of outward decorum, have
+at no time been very strait-laced. 'Charles,' we learn from a local
+history, 'sut se rendre populaire en prenant part aux amusements de
+la population et en se pliant, sans effort comme sans affectation,
+aux usages du pays.' During his whole period of exile he contrived
+to amuse himself. Affairs of gallantry, dancing, tennis, billiards,
+and other frivolous pursuits, occupied as much of his attention
+as the grave affairs of State over which Hyde and Ormonde spent
+so many anxious hours. When on a visit to Brussels in the spring
+of 1657, he employed, we are told, most of his time with Don John
+dancing, or at 'long paume, a Spanish play with balls filled with
+wire.' And, again: 'He passes his time with shooting at Bruges,
+and such other obscure pastimes.'
+
+This 'shooting' was the favourite Flemish sport of shooting with
+bow and arrows at an artificial bird fixed on a high pole, the
+prize being, on great occasions, a golden bird, which was hung by a
+chain of gold round the winner's neck. In the records of the Guilds
+of St. George and St. Sebastian at Bruges there are notices relating
+to Charles. The former was a society of cross-bowmen, the latter
+of archers. On June 11, 1656, Charles and the Duke of Gloucester
+were at the festival of the Society of St. George. Charles was the
+first to try his skill, and managed to hit the mark. After the
+Duke and many others had shot, Peter Pruyssenaere, a wine merchant
+in the Rue du Vieux Bourg, brought down the bird, and Charles hung
+the golden 'Bird of Honour' round his neck. On June 25 Charles
+visited the Society of St. Sebastian, when Michael Noe, a gardener,
+was the winner. The King and Gloucester both became members of
+the St. Sebastian, which is still a flourishing society. Going
+along the Rue des Carmes, the traveller passes the English convent
+on the left, and on the right, at the end of the street, comes
+to the Guild-house of St. Sebastian, with its slender tower and
+quiet garden, one of the pleasantest spots in Bruges. There the
+names of Charles and his brother are to be seen inscribed in a
+small volume bound in red morocco, the 'Bird of Honour' with its
+chain of gold, a silver arrow presented by the Duke of Gloucester,
+and some other interesting relics. On September 15, 1843, Queen
+Victoria, Prince Albert, King Leopold I., and the Queen of the
+Belgians, went to the Rue des Carmes and signed their names as
+members of this society, which now possesses two silver cups, presented
+by the Queen of England in 1845 and 1893. The Duke of York seems
+to have been successful as an archer, for in the Hotel de Ville
+at Bruges there is a picture by John van Meuninxhove, in which
+Charles is seen hanging the 'Bird of Honour' round his brother's
+neck.
+
+In April, 1657, the English Government was informed that the Court
+of Charles was preparing to leave Bruges. 'Yesterday' (April 7)
+'some of his servants went before to Brussels to make ready lodgings
+for Charles Stewart, the Duke of York, and the Duke of Gloucester.
+All that have or can compass so much money go along with Charles
+Stewart on Monday morning. I do admire how people live here for
+want of money. Our number is not increased since my last. The most
+of them are begging again for want of money; and when any straggling
+persons come, we have not so much money as will take a single man
+to the quarters; yet we promise ourselves great matters.' They
+were hampered in all their movements by this want of hard cash,
+for Charles was in debt at Bruges, and could not remove his goods
+until he paid his creditors. It was sadly humiliating. 'The King,'
+we read, 'will hardly live at Bruges any more, but he cannot remove
+his family and goods till we get money.' The dilemma seems to have
+been settled by Charles, his brothers, and most of the Court going
+off to Brussels, leaving their possessions behind them. The final
+move did not take place till February, 1658, and Clarendon says that
+Charles never lived at Bruges after that date. He may, however, have
+returned on a short visit, for Jesse, in his _Memoirs of the Court Of
+England under the Stuarts_, states that the King was playing tennis
+at Bruges when Sir Stephen Fox came to him with the great news, 'The
+devil is dead!' This would be in September, 1658, Cromwell having
+died on the third of that month. After the Restoration Charles sent
+to the citizens of Bruges a letter of thanks for the way in which
+they had received him. Nor did he forget, amidst the pleasures of
+the Court at Whitehall, the simple pastimes of the honest burghers,
+but presented to the archers of the Society of St. Sebastian the
+sum of 3,600 florins, which were expended on their hall of meeting.
+
+More than a hundred years later, when the Stuart dynasty was a thing
+of the past and George III. was seated on the throne of England,
+the Rue Haute saw the arrival of some travellers who were very
+different from the roystering Cavaliers and frail beauties who had
+made it gay in the days of the Merry Monarch. The English Jesuits
+of St. Omer, when expelled from their college, came to Bruges in
+August, 1762, and took up their abode in the House of the Seven
+Towers, where they found 'nothing but naked walls and empty chambers.'
+A miserable place it must have been. 'In one room a rough table of
+planks had been set up, and the famished travellers were rejoiced
+at the sight of three roast legs of mutton set on the primitive
+table. Knives, forks, and plates there were none. A Flemish servant
+divided the food with his pocket-knife. A farthing candle gave
+a Rembrandt-like effect to the scene. The boys slept that night
+on mattresses laid on the floor of one of the big empty rooms of
+the house. The first days at Bruges were cheerless enough.'[*]
+The religious houses, however, came to the rescue. Flemish monks
+and the nuns of the English convent helped the pilgrims, and the
+Jesuits soon established themselves at Bruges, where they remained
+in peace for a few years, till the Austrian Government drove them
+out. The same fate overtook the inmates of many monasteries and
+convents at Bruges in the reign of Joseph II., whose reforming
+zeal led to that revolt of the Austrian Netherlands which was the
+prelude to the invasion of Flanders by the army of the French
+Revolution.
+
+[Footnote *: Robinson, _Bruges, an Historical Sketch_, p. 291.]
+
+After the conquest of Belgium by the French it looked as if all
+the churches in Bruges were doomed. The Chapel of St. Basil was
+laid in ruins. The Church of St. Donatian, which had stood since
+the days of Baldwin Bras-de-Fer, was pulled down and disappeared
+entirely. Notre Dame, St. Sauveur, and other places of worship,
+narrowly escaped destruction; and it was not till the middle of
+the nineteenth century that the town recovered, in some measure,
+from these disasters.
+
+Bruges has doubtless shared in the general prosperity which has
+spread over the country since Belgium became an independent kingdom
+after the revolution of 1830, but its progress has been slow. It
+has never lost its old-world associations; and the names of the
+streets and squares, and the traditions connected with numberless
+houses which a stranger might pass without notice, are all so many
+links with the past. There is the Rue Espagnole, for example, where
+a vegetable market is held every Wednesday. This was the quarter
+where the Spanish merchants lived and did their business. There
+used to be a tall, dark, and, in fact, very dirty-looking old house
+in this street known by the Spanish name of the 'Casa Negra.' It
+was pulled down a few years ago; but lower down, at the foot of
+the street, the great cellars in which the Spaniards stored their
+goods remain; and on the Quai Espagnol was the Spanish Consulate,
+now a large dwelling-house. A few steps from the Quai Espagnol is
+the Place des Orientaux (Oosterlingen Plaats), where a minaret of
+tawny brick rises above the gables of what was once the Consulate
+of Smyrna, and on the north side of which, in the brave days of
+old, stood the splendid Maison des Orientaux, the headquarters
+of the Hanseatic League in Bruges, the finest house in Flanders,
+with turrets and soaring spire, and marvellous facade, and rooms
+inside all ablaze with gilding. The glory has departed; two modern
+dwelling-houses have taken the place of this commercial palace;
+but it must surely be a very dull imagination on which the sight
+of this spot, now so tranquil and commonplace, but once the centre
+of such important transactions, makes no impression. From the Place
+des Orientaux it is only a few minutes' stroll to the Rue Cour
+de Gand and the dark brown wooden front of the small house, now
+a lace shop, which tradition says was one of Memlinc's homes in
+Bruges, where we can fancy him, laboriously and with loving care,
+putting the last minute touches to some immortal painting.
+
+Then there is the Rue Anglaise, off the Quai Spinola, where the
+English Merchant Adventurers met to discuss their affairs in houses
+with such names as 'Old England' or 'The Tower of London.' The
+head of the colony, 'Governor of the English Nation beyond the
+Seas' they called him, was a very busy man 400 years ago.[*] The
+Scottish merchants were settled in the same district, close to
+the Church of Ste. Walburge. They called their house 'Scotland,'
+and doubtless made as good bargains as the 'auld enemy' in the
+next street. There is a building called the Parijssche Halle, or
+Halle de Paris, hidden away among the houses to the west of the
+Market-Place, with a cafe and a theatre where Flemish plays are acted
+now, which was formerly the Consulate of France; and subscription
+balls and amateur theatricals are given by the English residents of
+to-day in the fourteenth-century house of the Genoese merchants
+in the Rue Flamande. The list of streets and houses with old-time
+associations like these might be extended indefinitely, for in
+Bruges the past is ever present.
+
+[Footnote *: In the _Flandria Illustrata_ of Sanderus, vol. i.,
+p. 275, there is a picture of the 'Domus Anglorum.']
+
+[Illustration: BRUGES. Vegetable Market.]
+
+Even the flat-fronted, plain houses with which poverty or the bad
+taste of the last century replaced many of the older buildings
+do not spoil the picturesque appearance of the town as a whole,
+because it is no larger now than it was 600 years ago, and these
+modern structures are quite lost amongst their venerable neighbours.
+Thus Bruges retains its mediaeval character. In the midst, however,
+of all this wealth of architectural beauty and historical interest,
+the atmosphere of common everyday life seems to be so very dull and
+depressing that people living there are apt to be driven, by sheer
+boredom, into spending their lives in a round of small excitements
+and incessant, wearisome gossip, and into taking far more interest
+in the paltry squabbles of their neighbours over some storm in
+a teacup than in the more important topics which invigorate the
+minds of men and women in healthier and broader societies. Long
+before Rodenbach's romance was written this peculiarity of Bruges
+was proverbial throughout Belgium.
+
+But it is possible that a change is at hand, and that Bruges may
+once again become, not the Venice of the North--the time for that is
+past--but an important town, for the spirit of commercial enterprise
+which has done so much for other parts of Belgium during the last
+seventy-five years is now invading even this quiet place, whose
+citizens have begun to dream of recovering some portion of their
+former prosperity. In 1895 the Belgian Parliament passed a law
+providing for the construction, between Blankenberghe and Heyst,
+of a harbour connected with Bruges by a canal of large dimensions,
+and of an inner port at the town. The works at See-Brugge, as the
+outer port is called, are nearly completed, and will allow vessels
+drawing 26-1/2 feet of water to float at any state of the tide.
+The jetty describes a large curve, and the bend is such that its
+extremity is parallel to the coast, and 930 yards distant from
+the low-water mark. The sheltered roadstead is about 272 acres in
+extent, and communication is made with the canal by a lock 66 feet
+wide and 282 yards in length. From this point the canal, which has a
+depth of 26-1/2 feet and is fed by sea-water, runs in a straight
+line to Bruges, and ends at the inner port, which is within a few
+hundred yards of where the Roya used to meet the Zwijn. It is capable
+of affording a minimum capacity of 1,000,000 tons per annum, and
+the whole equipment has been fitted up necessary for dealing with
+this amount of traffic.
+
+The first ship, an English steamer, entered the new port at Bruges
+on the morning of May 29 in the present year (1905). The carillon
+rung from the Belfry, guns were fired, and a ceremony in honour
+of the event took place in the Hotel de Ville. It now remains to
+be seen whether any part of the trade which was lost 400 years ago
+can be recovered by the skill of modern engineers and the resources
+of modern capital.
+
+
+
+
+THE PLAIN OF WEST FLANDERS--YPRES
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VII
+
+THE PLAIN OF WEST FLANDERS--YPRES
+
+To the west of Bruges the wide plain of Flanders extends to the
+French frontier. Church spires and windmills are the most prominent
+objects in the landscape; but though the flatness of the scenery is
+monotonous, there is something pleasing to the eye in the endless
+succession of well-cultivated fields, interrupted at intervals by
+patches of rough bushland, canals, or slow-moving streams winding
+between rows of pollards, country houses embowered in woods and
+pleasure-grounds, cottages with fruitful gardens, orchards, small
+villages, and compact little towns, in most of which the diligent
+antiquary will find something of interest--a modest belfry, perhaps,
+with a romance of its own; a parish church, whose foundations were
+laid long ago in ground dedicated, in the distant past, to the
+worship of Thor or Woden; or the remains, it may be, of a mediaeval
+castle, from which some worthy knight, whose name is forgotten
+except in local traditions, rode away to the Crusades.
+
+This part of West Flanders, which lies wedged in between the coast,
+with its populous bathing stations, and the better-known district
+immediately to the south of it, where Ghent, Tournai, Courtrai,
+and other important centres draw many travellers every year, is
+seldom visited by strangers, who are almost as much stared at in
+some of the villages as they would be in the streets of Pekin. It
+is, however, very accessible. The roads are certainly far from
+good, and anything in the shape of a walking tour is out of the
+question, for the strongest pedestrian would have all his pleasure
+spoilt by the hard-going of the long, straight causeway. The ideal
+way to see the Netherlands and study the life of the people is
+to travel on the canals; but these are not so numerous here as
+in other parts of the country, and, besides, it is not very easy
+to arrange for a passage on the barges. But, in addition to the
+main lines of the State Railway, there are the 'Chemins-de-fer
+Vicinaux,' or light district railways, which run through all parts
+of Belgium. The fares on these are very low, and there are so many
+stoppages that the traveller can see a great many places in the
+course of a single day. There are cycle tracks, too, alongside
+most of the roads, the cost of keeping them in order being paid
+out of the yearly tax paid by the owners of bicycles.[*]
+
+[Footnote *: Bicycles entering Belgium pay an _ad valorem_ duty
+of 12 per cent.]
+
+[Illustration: THE FLEMISH PLAIN]
+
+This is the most purely Flemish part of Flanders. One very seldom
+notices that Spanish type of face which is so common elsewhere--at
+Antwerp, for instance. Here the race is almost unmixed, and the
+peasants speak nothing but Flemish to each other. Many of them
+do not understand a word of French, though in Belgium French is,
+as everyone knows, the language of public life and of literature.
+The newspapers published in Flemish are small, and do not contain
+much beyond local news. The result is that the country people in
+West Flanders know very little of what is going on in the world
+beyond their own parishes. The standard of education is low, being
+to a great extent in the hands of the clergy, who have hitherto
+succeeded in defeating all proposals for making it universal and
+compulsory.
+
+But, steeped as most of them are in ignorance and superstition,
+the agricultural labourers of West Flanders are, to all appearance,
+quite contented with their lot. Living is cheap, and their wants
+are few. Coffee, black bread, potatoes, and salted pork, are the
+chief articles of diet, and in some households even the pork is a
+treat for special occasions. They seldom taste butter, using lard
+instead; and the 'margarine' which is sold in the towns does not
+find its way into the cottages of the outlying country districts.
+Sugar has for many years been much dearer than in England, and the
+price is steadily rising, but with this exception the food of the
+people is cheap. Tea enters Belgium duty free, but the peasants
+never use it. Many villagers smoke coarse tobacco grown in their own
+gardens, and a 10-centimes cigar is the height of luxury. Tobacco
+being a State monopoly in France, the high price in that country
+makes smuggling common, and there is a good deal of contraband
+trading carried on in a quiet way on the frontiers of West Flanders.
+The average wage paid for field labour is from 1 franc 50 centimes
+to 2 francs a day for married men--that is to say, from about 1s.
+3d. to 1s. 8d. of English money. Bachelors generally receive 1
+franc (10d.) a day and their food. The working hours are long,
+often from five in the morning till eight in the evening in summer,
+and in winter from sunrise till sunset, with one break at twelve
+o'clock for dinner, consisting of bread with pork and black coffee,
+and another about four in the afternoon, when what remains of the
+mid-day meal is consumed.
+
+The Flemish farmhouse is generally a substantial building, with
+two large living-rooms, in which valuable old pieces of furniture
+are still occasionally to be found, though the curiosity dealers
+have, during the last quarter of a century, carried most of them
+away, polished them up, and sold them at a high profit. Carved
+chests, bearing the arms of ancient families, have been discovered
+lying full of rubbish in barns or stables, and handsome cabinets,
+with fine mouldings and brass fittings, have frequently been picked
+up for a few francs. The heavy beams of the ceilings, black with
+age, the long Flemish stoves, and the quaint window-seats deeply
+sunk in the thick walls, still remain, and make the interiors of many
+of these houses very picturesque; but the 'finds' of old furniture,
+curious brass or pewter dishes, and even stray bits of valuable
+tapestry, which used to rouse the cupidity of strangers, are now
+very rare. Almost all the brass work which is so eagerly bought by
+credulous tourists at Bruges in summer is bran-new stuff cleverly
+manufactured for sale--and sold it is at five or six times its
+real market value! There are no bargains to be picked up on the
+Dyver or in the shops of Bruges.
+
+[Illustration: DUINHOEK. Interior of a Farmhouse.]
+
+The country life is simple. A good deal of hard drinking goes on
+in most villages. More beer, probably, is consumed in Belgium per
+head of the population than in any other European country, Germany
+not excepted, and the system of swallowing 'little glasses' of fiery
+spirit on the top of beer brings forth its natural fruits. The
+drunken ways of the people are encouraged by the excessive number
+of public-houses. Practically anyone who can pay the Government
+fee and obtain a barrel of beer and a few tumblers may open a
+drinking-shop. It is not uncommon in a small country village with
+about 200 inhabitants to see the words 'Herberg' or 'Estaminet' over
+the doors of a dozen houses, in which beer is sold at a penny (or
+less) for a large glass, and where various throat-burning liquors
+of the _petit verre_ species can be had at the same price; and
+the result is that very often a great portion of the scanty wage
+paid on Saturday evening is melted into beer or gin on Sunday and
+Monday. As a rule, the Flemish labourer, being a merry, light-hearted
+soul, is merely noisy and jovial in a brutal sort of way in his
+cups; but let a quarrel arise, out come the knives, and before
+the rural policeman saunters along there are nasty rows, ending
+in wounds and sometimes in murder. When the lots are drawn for
+military service, and crowds of country lads with their friends
+flock into the towns, the public-houses do good business. Those
+who have drawn lucky numbers, and so escaped the conscription,
+get drunk out of joy; while those who find they must serve in the
+army drown their sorrow, or celebrate the occasion if they are
+of a martial turn, by reeling about the streets arm in arm with
+their companions, shouting and singing. Whole families, old and
+young alike, often join in these performances, and they must be
+very drunk and very disorderly before the police think of making
+even the mildest remonstrance.
+
+The gay character of the Flemings is best seen at the 'kermesse,'
+or fair, which is held in almost every village during summer. At
+Bruges, Ypres, and Furnes, and still more in such large cities
+as Brussels or Antwerp, the kermesse has ceased to be typical of
+the country, and is supplanted by fairs such as may be seen in
+England or in almost any other country. 'Merry-go-rounds' driven
+by steam, elaborate circuses, menageries, waxwork exhibitions,
+movable theatres, and modern 'shows' of every kind travel about,
+and settle for a few days, perhaps even for a few weeks, in various
+towns. The countryfolk of the surrounding district are delighted,
+and the showmen reap a goodly harvest of francs and centimes; but
+these fairs are tiresome and commonplace, much less amusing and
+lively than, for example, St. Giles's Fair at Oxford, though very
+nearly as noisy. But the kermesse proper, which still survives in
+some places, shows the Flemings amusing themselves in something
+more like the old fashion than anything which can be seen in the
+Market-Place of Bruges or on the boulevards of Brussels or Antwerp.
+Indeed, some of the village scenes, when the young people are dancing
+or shooting with bows and arrows at the mark, while the elders sit,
+with their mugs of beer and long pipes, watching and gossiping,
+are very like what took place in the times of the old painters who
+were so fond of producing pictures of the kermesses. The dress of
+the people, of course, is different, but the spirit of the scene,
+with its homely festivities, is wonderfully little changed.
+
+About twenty miles from the French frontier is the town of Ypres,
+once the capital of Flanders, and which in the time of Louis of Nevers
+was one of the three 'bonnes villes,' Bruges and Ghent being the
+others, which appointed deputies to defend the rights and privileges
+of the whole Flemish people.
+
+As Bruges grew out of the rude fortress on the banks of the Roya,
+so Ypres developed from a stronghold built, probably about the year
+900, on a small island in the river Yperlee. It was triangular
+in shape, with a tower at each corner, and was at first known by
+the inhabitants of the surrounding plain as the 'Castle of the
+Three Towers.' In course of time houses began to appear on the
+banks of the river near the island. A rampart of earth with a ditch
+defended these, and as the place grew, the outworks became more
+extensive. Owing to its strategic position, near France and in a
+part of Flanders which was constantly the scene of war, it was of
+great importance; and probably no other Flemish town has seen its
+defences so frequently altered and enlarged as Ypres has between
+the primitive days when the Crusading Thierry d'Alsace planted
+hedges of live thorns to strengthen the towers, and the reign of
+Louis XIV., when a vast and elaborate system of fortifications
+was constructed on scientific principles, under the direction of
+Vauban.
+
+The citizens of Ypres took a prominent part in most of the great
+events which distinguished the heroic period of Flemish history. In
+July, 1302, a contingent of 1,200 chosen men, '500 of them clothed
+in scarlet and the rest in black,' were set to watch the town and
+castle of Courtrai during the Battle of the Golden Spurs, and in
+the following year the victory was celebrated by the institution
+of the Confraternity of the Archers of St. Sebastian, which still
+exists at Ypres, the last survivor of the armed societies which
+flourished there during the Middle Ages. Seven hundred burghers
+of Ypres marched to Sluis, embarked in the Flemish boats which
+harassed the French fleet during the naval fight of June, 1340,
+and at the close of the campaign formed themselves into the
+Confraternity of St. Michael, which lasted till the French invasion
+of 1794. Forty years later we find no fewer than 5,000 of the men
+of Ypres, who had now changed their politics, on the French side
+at the Battle of Roosebeke, fighting in the thick mist upon the
+plain between Ypres and Roulers on that fatal day which saw the
+death of Philip van Artevelde and the triumph of the Leliarts.
+
+[Illustration: ADINKERQUE. At the Kermesse.]
+
+Next year, so unceasingly did the tide of war flow over the plain
+of Flanders, an English army, commanded by Henry Spencer, Bishop
+of Norwich, landed at Calais under the pretext of supporting the
+partisans of Pope Urban VI., who then occupied the Holy See, against
+the adherents of Pope Clement VII., who had established himself at
+Avignon. The burghers of Ghent flocked to the English standard,
+and the allies laid siege to Ypres, which was defended by the French
+and the Leliarts, who followed Louis of Maele, Count of Flanders,
+and maintained the cause of Clement.
+
+At that time the gateways were the only part of the fortifications
+made of stone. The ramparts were of earth, planted on the exterior
+slope with a thick mass of thorn-bushes, interlaced and strengthened
+by posts. Outside there were more defences of wooden stockades,
+and beyond them two ditches, divided by a dyke, on which was a
+palisade of pointed stakes. The town, thus fortified, was defended
+by about 10,000 men, and un June 8, 1383, the siege was begun by
+a force consisting of 17,000 English and 20,000 Flemings of the
+national party, most of whom came from Bruges and Ghent.
+
+The English had been told that the town would not offer a strong
+resistance, and on the first day of the siege 1,000 of them tried
+to carry it at once by assault. They were repulsed; and after that
+assaults by the besiegers and sorties by the garrison continued
+day after day, the loss of life on both sides being very great.
+At last the besiegers, finding that they could not, in the face of
+the shower of arrows, javelins, and stones which met them, break
+through the palisades and the sharp thorn fences (those predecessors
+of the barbed-wire entanglements of to-day), force the gates, or
+carry the ramparts, built three wooden towers mounted on wheels,
+and pushed them full of soldiers up to the gates. But the garrison
+made a sortie, seized the towers, destroyed them, and killed or
+captured the soldiers who manned them.
+
+Spencer on several occasions demanded the surrender of the town,
+but all his proposals were rejected. The English pressed closer and
+closer, but were repulsed with heavy losses whenever they delivered
+an assault. The hopes of the garrison rose high on August 7, the
+sixty-first day of the siege, when news arrived that a French army,
+100,000 strong, accompanied by the forces of the Count of Flanders,
+was marching to the relief of Ypres. Early next morning the English
+made a fresh attempt to force their way into the town, but they
+were once more driven back. A little later in the day they twice
+advanced with the utmost bravery. Again they were beaten back.
+So were the burghers of Ghent, whom the English reproached for
+having deceived them by saying that Ypres would fall in three days,
+and whose answer to this accusation was, a furious attack on one
+of the gates, in which many of them fell. In the afternoon the
+English again advanced, and succeeded in forcing their way through
+part of the formidable thorn hedge; but it was of no avail, and once
+more they had to retire, leaving heaps of dead behind them. After
+a rest of some hours, another attack was made on seven different
+parts of the town at the same time. This assault was the most furious
+and bloody of the siege, but it was the last. Spencer saw that, in
+spite of the splendid courage of his soldiers and of the Flemish
+burghers, it would be impossible to take the town before the French
+army arrived, and during the night the English, with their allies
+from Ghent and Bruges, retired from before Ypres. The failure of
+this campaign left Flanders at the mercy of France; but the death
+of Count Louis of Maele, which took place in January, 1384, brought
+in the House of Burgundy, under whose rule the Flemings enjoyed
+a long period of prosperity and almost complete independence.
+
+It was believed in Ypres that the town had been saved by the
+intercession of the Virgin Mary, its patron saint. In the Cathedral
+Church of St. Martin the citizens set up an image of Notre,
+Dame-de-Thuine, that is, Our Lady of the Enclosures, an allusion
+to the strong barrier of thorns which had kept the enemy at bay;
+and a kermesse, appointed to be held on the first Sunday of August
+every year in commemoration of the siege, received the name of
+the 'Thuindag,' or Day of the Enclosures.[*] The people of Ypres,
+though they fought on the French side, had good reason to be proud
+of the way in which they defended their homes; but the consequences
+of the siege were disastrous, for the commerce of the town never
+recovered the loss of the large working-class population which
+left it at that time.
+
+[Footnote *: 'Thuin,' or 'tuin,' in Flemish means an enclosed space,
+such as a garden plot.]
+
+[Illustration: A FARMSTEADING]
+
+The religious troubles of the sixteenth century left their mark
+on Ypres as well as on the rest of Flanders. Everyone has read
+the glowing sentences in which the historian of the Dutch Republic
+describes the Cathedral of Antwerp, and tells how it was wrecked
+by the reformers during the image-breaking in the summer of 1566.
+What happened on the banks of the Scheldt appeals most to the
+imagination; but all over Flanders the statues and the shrines,
+the pictures and the stores of ecclesiastical wealth, with which
+piety, or superstition, or penitence had enriched so many churches
+and religious houses, became the objects of popular fury. There
+had been field-preaching near Ypres as early as 1562.[*] Other
+parts of West Flanders had been visited by the apostles of the New
+Learning, and on August 15, 1566, the reformers swept down upon
+Ypres and sacked the churches.
+
+[Footnote *: Motley, _Rise of the Dutch Republic_, part ii., chapter
+vi.]
+
+In the awful tragedy which soon followed, when Parma came upon
+the scene, that 'spectacle of human energy, human suffering, and
+human strength to suffer, such as has not often been displayed
+upon the stage of the world's events' the town had its share of
+the persecutions and exactions which followed the march of the
+Spanish soldiery; but for more than ten years a majority of the
+burghers adhered to the cause of Philip. In July, 1578, however,
+Ypres fell into the hands of the Protestants, and became their
+headquarters in West Flanders. Five years later Alexander of Parma
+besieged it. The siege lasted until April of the following year,
+when the Protestants, worn out by famine, capitulated, and the town
+was occupied by the Spaniards, who 'resorted to instant measures
+for cleansing a place which had been so long in the hands of the
+infidels, and, as the first step towards this purification, the
+bodies of many heretics who had been buried for years were taken
+from their graves and publicly hanged in their coffins. All living
+adherents to the Reformed religion were instantly expelled from
+the place.'[*] By this time the population was reduced to 5,000
+souls, and the fortifications were a heap of ruins.
+
+[Footnote *: Motley, _Rise of the Dutch Republic_, part ii., chapter
+vi.]
+
+[Illustration: YPRES. Place du Musee (showing Top Part of the Belfry).]
+
+A grim memorial of those troublous times is still preserved at
+Ypres. The Place du Musee is a quiet corner of the town, where a
+Gothic house with double gables contains a collection of old paintings,
+medals, instruments of torture, and some other curiosities. It was
+the Bishop of Ypres who, at midnight on June 4, 1568, announced to
+Count Egmont, in his prison at Brussels, that his hour had come; and
+the cross-hilted sword, with its long straight blade, which hangs
+on the wall of the Museum is the sword with which the executioner
+'severed his head from his shoulders at a single blow' on the following
+morning. The same weapon, a few minutes later, was used for the
+despatch of Egmont's friend, Count Horn.
+
+Before the end of that dismal sixteenth century Flanders regained
+some of the liberties for which so much blood had been shed; but
+while the Protestant Dutch Republic rose in the north, the 'Catholic'
+or 'Spanish' Netherlands in the south remained in the possession
+of Spain until the marriage of Philip's daughter Isabella to the
+Archduke Albert, when these provinces were given as a marriage
+portion to the bride. This was in 1599. Though happier times followed
+under the moderate rule of Albert and Isabella, war continued to
+be the incessant scourge of Flanders, and during the marching and
+countermarching of armies across this battlefield of Europe, Ypres
+scarcely ever knew what peace meant. Four times besieged and four
+times taken by the French in the wars of Louis XIV., the town had
+no rest; and for miles all round it the fields were scarred by the
+new system of attacking strong places which Vauban had introduced
+into the art of war. Louis, accompanied by Schomberg and Luxembourg,
+was himself present at the siege of 1678; and Ypres, having been ceded
+to France by the Treaty of Nimeguen in that year, was afterwards
+strengthened by fortifications constructed from plans furnished by
+the great French engineer.[*]
+
+[Footnote *: Letter from Vauban to Louvois on the fortifications
+of Ypres, 1689; Vereecke, pp. 325-357.]
+
+In the year 1689 Vauban speaks of Ypres as a place 'formerly great,
+populous, and busy, but much reduced by the frequent sedition and
+revolts of its inhabitants, and by the great wars which it has
+endured.' And in this condition it has remained ever since. Though
+the period which followed the Treaty of Rastadt in 1714, when Flanders
+passed into the possession of the Emperor Charles VI., and became
+a part of the 'Austrian Netherlands,' was a period of considerable
+improvement, Ypres never recovered its position, not even during
+the peaceful reign of the Empress Maria Theresa. The revolution
+against Joseph II. disturbed everything, and in June, 1794, the town
+yielded, after a short siege, to the army of the French Republic.
+The name of Flanders disappeared from the map of Europe. The whole of
+Belgium was divided, like France, with which it was now incorporated,
+into _departements_, Ypres being in the Department of the Lys. For
+twenty years, during the wars of the Republic, the Consulate, and
+the Empire, though the conscription was a constant drain upon the
+youth of Flanders, who went away to leave their bones on foreign
+soil, nothing happened to disturb the quiet of the town, and the
+fortifications were falling into decay when the return of Napoleon
+from Elba set Europe in a blaze. During the Hundred Days guns and
+war material were hurried over from England, the old defences were
+restored, and new works constructed by the English engineers; but
+the Battle of Waterloo rendered these preparations unnecessary, and
+the military history of Ypres came to an end when the short-lived
+Kingdom of the Netherlands was established by the Congress of Vienna,
+though it was nominally a place of arms till 1852, when the
+fortifications were destroyed. Nowadays everything is very quiet
+and unwarlike. The bastions and lunettes, the casemates and moats,
+which spread in every direction round the town, have almost entirely
+disappeared, and those parts of the fortifications which remain
+have been turned into ornamental walks.[*]
+
+[Footnote *: The evolution of Ypres from a feudal tower on an island
+until it became a great fortress can be traced in a very interesting
+volume of maps and plans published by M. Vereecke in 1858, as a
+supplement to his _Histoire Militaire d'Ypres_. It shows the first
+defensive works, those erected by Vauban, the state of the
+fortifications between 1794 and 1814, and what the English engineers
+did in 1815.]
+
+But while so little remains of the works which were constructed,
+at such a cost and with so much labour, for the purposes of war,
+the arts of peace, which once flourished at Ypres, have left a
+more enduring monument. There is nothing in Bruges or any other
+Flemish town which can compare for massive grandeur with the pile
+of buildings at the west end of the Grand Place of Ypres. During
+two centuries the merchants of Flanders, whose towns were the chief
+centres of Western commerce and civilization, grew to be the richest
+in Europe, and a great portion of the wealth which industry and
+public spirit had accumulated was spent in erecting those noble
+civic and commercial buildings which are still the glory of Flanders.
+The foundation-stone of the Halle des Drapiers, or Cloth Hall, of
+Ypres was laid by Baldwin of Constantinople, then Count of Flanders,
+at the beginning of the thirteenth century, but more than 100 years
+had passed away before it was completed. Though the name of the
+architect who began it is unknown, the unity of design which
+characterizes the work makes it probable that the original plans
+were adhered to till the whole was finished. Nothing could be simpler
+than the general idea; but the effect is very fine. The ground-floor
+of the facade, about 150 yards long, is pierced by a number of
+rectangular doors, over which are two rows of pointed windows,
+each exactly above the other, and all of the same style. In the
+upper row every second window is filled up, and contains the statue
+of some historical character. At each end there is a turret; and
+the belfry, a square with towers at the corners, rises from the
+centre of the building.
+
+Various additions have been made from time to time to the original
+Halle des Drapiers since it was finished in the year 1304, and of
+these the 'Nieuwerck' is the most interesting. The east end of the
+Halle was for a long time hidden by a number of wooden erections,
+which, having been put up for various purposes after the main building
+was finished, were known as the 'Nieuwe wercken,' or new works.
+They were pulled down in the beginning of the seventeenth century,
+and replaced by the stone edifice, in the style of the Spanish
+Renaissance, which now goes by the name of the Nieuwerck, with its
+ten shapely arches supported by slender pillars, above whose sculptured
+capitals rise tiers of narrow windows and the steeply-pitched roof
+with gables of curiously carved stone. Ypres had ceased to be a
+great commercial city long before the Nieuwerck was built; but the
+Cloth Hall was a busy place during the thirteenth and fourteenth
+centuries, when Ypres shared with Bruges the responsibility of
+managing the Flemish branch of the Hanseatic League.
+
+The extensive system of monopolies which the League maintained
+was, as a matter of course, the cause of much jealousy and bad
+feeling. In Flanders, Ghent, Bruges, and Ypres defended their own
+privileges against other towns, and quarrelled amongst themselves.
+The merchants of Ypres had a monopoly which forbade all weaving for
+three leagues round the town, under a penalty of fifty livres and
+confiscation of the looms and linen woven; but the weavers in the
+neighbouring communes infringed this monopoly, and sold imitations of
+Ypres linen cloth on all hands. There was constant trouble between
+the people of Ypres and their neighbours at Poperinghe. Sometimes
+the weavers of Ypres, to enforce their exclusive privileges, marched
+in arms against Poperinghe, and sometimes the men of Poperinghe
+retaliated by attacking their powerful rivals. Houses were burnt,
+looms were broken up, and lives were lost in these struggles, which
+were so frequent that for a long time something like a chronic
+state of war existed between the two places.
+
+[Illustration: YPRES. Arcade under the Nieuwerk.]
+
+Besides the troubles caused by the jealousy of other towns, intestine
+disputes arising out of the perpetual contest between labour and
+capital went on from year to year within the walls of Ypres. There,
+as in the other Flemish towns, a sharp line was drawn between the
+working man, by whose hands the linen was actually woven, and the
+merchants, members of the Guilds, by whom it was sold. In these
+towns, which maintained armies and made treaties of peace, and whose
+friendship was sought by princes and statesmen, the artisans, whose
+industry contributed so much to the importance of the community,
+resented any infringement of their legal rights. By law the magistrates
+of Ypres were elected annually, and because this had not been done
+in 1361 the people rose in revolt against the authorities. The mob
+invaded the Hotel de Ville, where the magistrates were assembled.
+The Baillie, Jean Deprysenaere, trusting to his influence as the
+local representative of the Count of Flanders, left the council
+chamber, and tried to appease the rioters. He was set upon and
+killed. Then the crowd rushed into the council chamber, seized
+the other magistrates, and locked them up in the belfry, where
+they remained prisoners for some days. The leaders of the revolt
+met, and resolved to kill their prisoners, and this sentence was
+executed on the Burgomaster and two of the Sheriffs, who were beheaded
+in front of the Halle in the presence of their colleagues.[*] It
+was by such stern deeds that the fierce democracy of the Flemish
+communes preserved their rights.
+
+[Footnote *: Vereecke, p. 41.]
+
+Each town, however, stood for itself alone. The idea of government
+by the populace on the marketplace was common to them all, but they
+were kept apart by the exclusive spirit of commercial jealousy.
+The thirst for material prosperity consumed them; but they had no
+bond of union, and each was ready to advance its own interests
+at the expense of its rivals. Therefore, either in the face of
+foreign invasion, or when the policy of some Count led to revolt
+and civil war, it was seldom that the people of Flanders were united.
+'L'Union fait la Force' is the motto of modern Belgium, but in the
+Middle Ages there was no powerful central authority round which the
+communes rallied. Hence the spectacle of Ghent helping an English
+army to storm the ramparts of Ypres, or of the Guildsmen of Bruges
+girding on their swords to strike a blow for Count Louis of Maele
+against the White Hoods who marched from Ghent. Hence the permanent
+unrest of these Flemish towns, the bickerings and the sheddings of
+blood, the jealousy of trade pitted against trade or of harbour
+against harbour, the insolence in the hour of triumph and the abject
+submission in the hour of defeat, and all the evils which discord
+brought upon the country. No town suffered more than Ypres from
+the distracted state of Flanders, which, combined with the ravages
+of war and the religious dissensions of the sixteenth century,
+reduced it from the first rank amongst the cities of the Netherlands
+to something very like the condition of a quiet country town in an
+out-of-the-way corner of England. That is what the Ypres of to-day
+is like--a sleepy country town, with clean, well-kept streets, dull
+and uninteresting save for the stately Cloth Hall, which stands
+there a silent memorial of the past.
+
+
+
+
+FURNES--THE PROCESSION OF PENITENTS
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VIII
+
+FURNES--THE PROCESSION OF PENITENTS
+
+The traveller wandering amongst the towns and villages in this
+corner of West Flanders is apt to feel that he is on a kind of
+sentimental journey as he moves from place to place, and finds
+himself everywhere surrounded by things which belong to the past
+rather than to the present. The very guidebooks are eloquent if we
+read between the lines. This place 'was formerly of much greater
+importance.' That 'was formerly celebrated for its tapestries.'
+From this Hotel de Ville 'the numerous statuettes with which the
+building was once embellished have all disappeared.' The tower
+of that church has been left unfinished for the last 500 years.
+'Fuimus' might be written on them all. And so, some twenty miles
+north of Ypres, on a plain which in the seventeenth century was
+so studded with earthen redoubts and serrated by long lines of
+field-works and ditches that the whole countryside between Ypres
+and Dunkirk was virtually one vast entrenched camp, we come to
+the town of Furnes, another of the places on which time has laid
+its heavy hand.
+
+The early history of Furnes is obscure, though it is generally
+supposed to have grown up round a fortress erected by Baldwin
+Bras-de-Fer to check the inroads of the Normans. It suffered much,
+like its neighbours, from wars and revolutions,[*] and is now one
+of the quietest of the Flemish towns. The market-place is a small
+square, quaintly picturesque, surrounded by clusters of little
+brick houses with red and blue tiled roofs, low-stepped gables,
+and deep mouldings round the windows. Behind these dwelling-places
+the bold flying buttresses of the Church of Ste. Walburge, whose
+relics were brought to Furnes by Judith, wife of Baldwin Bras-de-Fer,
+and the tower of St. Nicholas, lift themselves on the north and
+east; and close together in a corner to the west are the dark gray
+Hotel de Ville and Palais de Justice, in a room of which the judges
+of the Inquisition used to sit.
+
+[Footnote *: 'Furnes etait devenue un _oppidium_, aux termes d'une
+charte de 1183, qui avait a se defendre a la fois contre les incursions
+des etrangers et les attaques d'une population "indocile et cruelle,"
+comme l'appelle l'Abbe de Saint Riquier Hariulf, toujours dechiree
+par les factions et toujours prete a la revolte.'--GILLIODTS VAN
+SEVEREN: _Recueil des Anciennes Coutumes de la Belgique; Quartier
+de Furnes_, vol. i., p. 28.]
+
+[Illustration: FURNES. Grand Place and Belfry.]
+
+Though some features are common to nearly all the Flemish towns--the
+market-place, the belfry, the Hotel de Ville, the old gateways,
+and the churches, with their cherished paintings--yet each of them
+has generally some association of its own. In Bruges we think of
+how the merchants bought and sold, how the gorgeous city rose,
+clothed itself in all the colours of the rainbow, glittered for
+a time, and sank in darkness. In the crowded streets of modern
+Ghent, the busy capital of East Flanders, we seem to catch a glimpse
+of bold Jacques van Artevelde shouldering his way up to the Friday
+Market, or of turbulent burghers gathering there to set Pope, or
+Count of Flanders, or King of Spain at defiance. Ypres and its flat
+meadows suggest one of the innumerable paintings of the Flemish
+wars, the 'battle-pieces' in which the Court artists took such
+pride: the town walls with ditch and glacis before them, and within
+them the narrow-fronted houses, and the flag flying from steeple
+or belfry; the clumsy cannon puffing out clouds of smoke; the King
+of France capering on a fat horse and holding up his baton in an
+attitude of command in the foreground; and in the distance the
+tents of the camp, where the travelling theatre was set up, and
+the musicians fiddled, and an army of serving-men waited on the
+rouged and powdered ladies who had followed the army into Flanders.
+
+[Illustration: FURNES. Peristyle of Town Hall and Palais de Justice.]
+
+Furnes, somehow, always recalls the Spanish period. The Hotel de
+Ville, a very beautiful example of the Renaissance style, with
+its rare hangings of Cordovan leather and its portraits of the
+Archduke Albert and his bride, the Infanta Isabella, is scarcely
+changed since it was built soon after the death of Philip II. The
+Corps de Garde Espagnol and the Pavilion des Officiers Espagnols
+in the market-place, once the headquarters of the whiskered bravos
+who wrought such ills to Flanders, are now used by the Municipal
+Council of the town as a museum and a public library; but the stones
+of this little square were often trodden by the persecutors, with
+their guards and satellites, in the years when Peter Titelmann
+the Inquisitor stalked through the fields of Flanders, torturing
+and burning in the name of the Catholic Church and by authority
+of the Holy Office. The spacious room in which the tribunal of the
+Inquisition sat is nowadays remarkable only for its fine proportions
+and venerable appearance; but, though it was not erected until
+after the Spanish fury had spent its force, and at a time when
+wiser methods of government had been introduced, it reminds us of
+the days when the maxims of Torquemada were put in force amongst
+the Flemings by priests more wicked and merciless than any who
+could be found in Spain. And in the market-place the people must
+often have seen the dreadful procession by means of which the Church
+sought to strike terror into the souls of men. Those public orgies
+of clerical intolerance were the suitable consummation of the crimes
+which had been previously committed in the private conclave of
+the Inquisitors. The burning or strangling of a heretic was not
+accompanied by so much pomp and circumstance in small towns like
+Furnes as in the great centres, where multitudes, led by the highest
+in the land, were present to enjoy the spectacle; but the Inquisition
+of the Netherlands, under which Flanders groaned for so many years,
+was, as Philip himself once boasted, 'much more pitiless than that
+of Spain.'
+
+The groans of the victims will never more be heard in the
+torture-chamber, nor will crowds assemble in the market-place to
+watch the cortege of the _auto-da-fe_; but every year the famous
+Procession of Penitents, which takes place on the last Sunday of
+July, draws many strangers to Furnes.
+
+It is said in Bruges that the ghost of a Spanish soldier, condemned
+to expiate eternally a foul crime done at the bidding of the Holy
+Office, walks at midnight on the Quai Vert, like Hamlet's father
+on the terrace at Elsinore; and superstitious people might well
+fancy that a spectre appears in the market-place of Furnes on the
+summer's night when the town is preparing for the annual ceremony.
+The origin of the procession was this: In the year 1650 a soldier
+named Mannaert, only twenty-two years old, being in garrison at
+Furnes, went to Confession and Communion in the Chapel of the Capucins.
+After he had received the consecrated wafer, he was persuaded by one
+of his comrades, Mathurin Lejeusne, to take it out of his mouth,
+wrap it in a cloth, and, on returning to his lodging, fry it over
+a fire, under the delusion that by reducing it to powder he would
+make himself invulnerable. The young man was arrested, confessed his
+guilt, and himself asked for punishment. Condemned to be strangled,
+he heard the sentence without a murmur, and went to his death singing
+the penitential psalms. Soon afterwards Mathurin Lejeusne, the
+instigator of the sacrilege, was shot for some breach of military
+duty. This was regarded as a proof of Divine justice, and the citizens
+resolved that something must be done to appease the wrath of God,
+which they feared would fall upon their town because of the outrage
+done, as they believed, to the body of His Son. A society calling
+itself the 'Confrerie de la Sodalite du Sauveur Crucifie et de
+la Sainte Mere Marie, se trouvant en douleur dessous la Croix,
+sur Mont Calvaire,' had been formed a few years before at Furnes,
+and the members now decided that a Procession of Penitents should
+walk through the streets every summer and represent to the people
+the story of the Passion.
+
+[Illustration: NIEUPORT. Interior of Church.]
+
+Though the procession at Furnes is a thing of yesterday compared to
+the Procession of the Holy Blood at Bruges, it is far more suggestive
+of mediaevalism. The hooded faces of the penitents, the quaint wooden
+figures representing Biblical characters, the coarse dresses, the
+tawdry colours, the strangely weird arrangement of the whole business,
+take us back into the monkish superstitions of the Dark Ages, with
+their mystery plays. It is best seen from one of the windows of
+the Spanish House, or from the balcony of the Hotel de Ville, on
+a sultry day, when the sky is heavy with black clouds, and thunder
+growls over the plain of Flanders, and hot raindrops fall now and
+then into the muddy streets. The first figure which appears is a
+veiled penitent bearing the standard of the Sodality. Then come,
+one after another, groups of persons representing various scenes
+in the Bible story, each group preceded by a penitent carrying
+an inscription to explain what follows. Abraham with his sword
+conducts Isaac to the sacrifice on Mount Moriah. A penitent holding
+the serpent and the cross walks before Moses. Two penitents wearily
+drag a car on which Joseph and Mary are seen seated in the stable
+at Bethlehem. The four shepherds and the three Magi follow. Then
+comes the flight into Egypt, with Mary on an ass led by Joseph,
+the infant Christ in her arms. Later we see the doctors of the
+Temple walking in two rows, disputing with the young Jesus in their
+midst. The triumphal entry into Jerusalem is represented by a crowd
+of schoolchildren waving palm-branches and singing hosannahs round
+Jesus mounted on an ass. The agony in the garden, Peter denying
+his Lord and weeping bitterly, Jesus crowned with thorns, Pilate
+in his judgment-hall, the Saviour staggering beneath the cross,
+the Crucifixion itself, the Resurrection and the Ascension, are
+all shown with the crude realism of the Middle Ages. There are
+penitents bearing ponderous crosses on their shoulders, or carrying
+in their hands the whips, the nails, the thorns, the veil of the
+Temple rent in twain, a picture of the darkened sun, and other
+symbols of the Passion. At the end, amidst torches and incense
+and solemn chanting, the Host is exhibited for the adoration of
+the crowd.
+
+[Illustration: FURNES. Tower of St. Nicholas.]
+
+Much of this spectacle is grotesque, and even ludicrous; but there
+is also a great deal that is terribly real, for the penitents are
+not actors playing a part, but are all persons who have come to
+Furnes for the purpose of doing penance. They are disguised by
+the dark brown robes which cover them from head to foot, so that
+they can see their way only through the eyeholes in the hoods which
+hide their faces; but as they pass silently along, bending under
+the heavy crosses, or holding out before them scrolls bearing such
+words as, 'All they that see Me laugh Me to scorn,' 'They pierced
+My hands and My feet,' or, 'See if there be any sorrow like unto
+My sorrow,' there are glimpses of delicate white hands grasping the
+hard wood of the crosses, and of small, shapely feet bare in the
+mud. What sighs, what tears and vain regrets, what secret tragedies
+of passion, guilt, remorse, may not be concealed amongst the doleful
+company who tread their own Via Dolorosa on that pilgrimage of
+sorrow through the streets of Furnes!
+
+[Illustration: FURNES. In St. Walburge's Church.]
+
+
+
+
+NIEUPORT--THE BATTLE OF THE DUNES
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IX
+
+NIEUPORT--THE BATTLE OF THE DUNES
+
+On the morning of July 2, in the year 1600, two armies--Spaniards,
+under the Archduke Albert, and Dutchmen, under Prince Maurice of
+Nassau--stood face to face amongst the dunes near Nieuport, where
+the river Yser falls into the sea about ten miles west from Ostend.
+
+In a field to the east of Nieuport there is a high, square tower,
+part of a monastery and church erected by the Templars in the middle
+of the twelfth century, which, though it escaped complete destruction,
+was set on fire and nearly consumed when the town was attacked and
+laid in ruins by the English and the burghers of Ghent in 1383,
+the year of their famous siege of Ypres. It is now in a half-ruinous
+condition, but in July, 1600, it was an important part of the
+fortifications, and from the top the watchmen of the Spanish garrison
+could see the country all round to a great distance beyond the
+broad moat which then surrounded the strong walls of Nieuport.
+A few miles inland, to the southwest, in the middle of the plain
+of Flanders, were the houses of Furnes, grouped round the church
+tower of St. Nicholas. To the north a wide belt of sandhills (the
+'dunes'), with the sea beyond them, extended far past Ostend on
+the east, and to the harbour of Dunkirk on the west. Nearer, on
+the landward side of the dunes to the east, and within less than a
+mile of each other, were the villages of Westende and Lombaerdzyde.
+Close at hand, all round Nieuport, there were numerous small lakes
+and watercourses connected with the channel of the Yser, which,
+flowing past the town, widened out until it joined the sea, and
+became a harbour, which on that morning was full of shipping.
+
+A new chapter had just begun in the history of West Flanders when
+the Dutchmen and the Spaniards thus met to slaughter each other
+amongst the sand and rushes of the dunes. Philip II. had offered to
+cede the Spanish Netherlands to his daughter, the Infanta Isabella,
+on condition that a marriage was arranged between her and the Archduke
+Albert of Austria. After the death of Philip II. this offer was
+confirmed by his successor, Philip III., and the wedding took place
+in April, 1599.
+
+[Illustration: NIEUPORT. A Fair Parishioner.]
+
+Albert and Isabella were both entering on the prime of life, the
+Archduke being forty and the Infanta thirty-two at the time of
+their marriage, and were both of a character admirably fitted for
+the lofty station to which they had been called. In their portraits,
+which hang, very often frayed and tarnished, on the walls of the
+Hotel de Ville of many a Flemish town, there is nothing very royal
+or very attractive; but, even after making every allowance for the
+flattery of contemporary historians, there can be little doubt
+that their popularity was well deserved--well deserved if even a
+part of what has been said about them is true. The Archduke is
+always said to have taken Philip II. as a model of demeanour, but
+he had none of the worst faults of the sullen, powerful despot,
+with that small mind, that 'incredibly small' mind of his, and
+cold heart, cold alike to human suffering and human love, who had
+held the Flemings, whom he hated, for so many years in the hollow
+of his hand. His grave mien and reserved habits, probably acquired
+during his sojourn at the Court of Spain, were distasteful to the
+gay and pleasure-loving people of Flanders, who would have preferred
+a Prince more like Charles V., whose versatility enabled him to
+adapt himself to the customs of each amongst the various races over
+whom he ruled. Nevertheless, if they did not love him they respected
+him, and were grateful for the moderation and good feeling which
+distinguished his reign, and gave their distracted country, after
+thirty years of civil war, a period of comparative tranquillity.
+
+The Infanta Isabella, _debonnaire_, affable, tolerant, and
+noble-hearted, as she is described, gained the hearts of the Flemings
+as her husband never did. 'One could not find any Court more truly
+royal or more brilliant in its public fetes, which sometimes recall
+the splendid epoch of the House of Burgundy. Isabella loves a country
+life. She is often to be seen on horseback, attending the tournaments,
+leading the chase, flying the hawk, taking part in the sports of
+the bourgeoise, shooting with the crossbow, and carrying off the
+prize.' Above all things, her works of charity endeared her to the
+people. In time of war she established hospitals for the wounded,
+for friends and enemies alike, where she visited them, nursed them,
+and dressed their wounds with her own hands, with heroic courage
+and tenderness.[*]
+
+[Footnote *: De Gerlache, i. 260.]
+
+[Illustration: NIEUPORT. Hall and Vicarage.]
+
+Even on their first coming into Flanders, before their characters
+were known except by hearsay, they were received with extraordinary
+enthusiasm. Travelling by way of Luxembourg, they came to Namur, where
+their first visit was made the occasion of a military fete, conducted
+under the personal supervision of Comte Florent de Berlaimont. At
+Nivelles the Duc d'Arschot paid out of his own purse the cost of
+the brilliant festivities to which the people of Brabant flocked
+in order to bid their new rulers welcome, and himself led the
+procession, accompanied by the Archbishop of Malines and the Bishop
+of Antwerp. So they journeyed on amidst scenes of public rejoicing
+until they came to Brussels, where they established their Court in
+accordance with the customs and ceremonies which had been usual
+under the Dukes of Burgundy and the Kings of Spain.
+
+But when the Archdukes, as they were called, passed from town to
+town on this Royal progress, the phantoms of war, pestilence, and
+famine hung over the land. The great cities of Flanders had been
+deserted by thousands of their inhabitants. The sea trade of the
+country had been destroyed by the vigorous blockade which the Dutch
+ships of war maintained along the coast. Religious intolerance
+had driven the most industrious of the working classes to find a
+refuge in Holland or England. Villages lay in ruins, surrounded
+by untilled fields and gardens run to seed. Silent looms and empty
+warehouses were seen on every side. To such a pass had the disastrous
+policy of the Escurial brought this fair province of the Spanish
+Empire! From all parts of Flanders the cry for peace went up, but
+the time for peace was not yet come.[*]
+
+[Footnote *: _L'Abbe Nameche_, xxi. 6-8.]
+
+The new reign had just begun when Maurice of Nassau suddenly invaded
+Flanders with a great force, and laid siege to Nieuport, the garrison
+of which, reinforced by an army, at the head of which the Archduke
+Albert had hurried across Flanders, was under the command of the
+Archduke himself, and many Spanish Generals of great experience
+in the wars.
+
+[Illustration: NIEUPORT. The Quay, with Eel-boats and Landing-stages.]
+
+Though the Court at Brussels had been taken by surprise, the Dutch
+army was in a position of great danger. Part of it lay on the west
+side of the Yser, and part to the east, amongst the dunes near
+Lombaerdzyde and Westende, with a bridge of boats thrown across
+the river as their only connection. Their ships were at anchor
+close to the shore; but Prince Maurice frankly told his men that
+it was useless to think of embarking in case of defeat, and that,
+therefore, they must either win the day or perish there, for the
+Spaniards were before them under the protection of Nieuport, the river
+divided them, the sea was behind them, and it would be impossible
+for a beaten army to escape by retreating through the dunes in the
+direction of Ostend.
+
+Such was the position of affairs beneath the walls of Nieuport
+at sunrise on July 2, 1600. The morning was spent by the Dutch
+in preparing for battle. Towards noon the Spanish leaders held
+a council of war, at which it was decided to attack the enemy as
+soon as possible, and about three o'clock the battle began. A stiff
+breeze from the west, blowing up the English Channel, drove clouds
+of sand into the eyes of the Spaniards, and the bright rays of the
+afternoon sun, shining in their faces as they advanced to the attack,
+dazzled and confused them. But, in spite of these disadvantages, it
+seemed at first as if the fortunes of the day were to go in their
+favour.
+
+The bridge of boats across the Yser was broken, and some of the
+Dutch regiments, seized by a sudden panic, began to retreat towards
+the sea; but, finding it impossible to reach the ships, they rallied,
+and began once more to fight with all the dogged courage of their
+race. For some hours the battle was continued with equal bravery
+on both sides, the Spaniards storming a battery which the Dutch
+had entrenched amongst the dunes, and the Dutch defending it so
+desperately that the dead and wounded lay piled in heaps around
+it. But at last the Spanish infantry were thrown into confusion
+by a charge of horsemen; the Archduke Albert was wounded, and had
+to retire from the front to have his injuries attended to. Prince
+Maurice ordered a general advance of all his army, and in a few
+minutes the enemy were fleeing from the battlefield, leaving behind
+them 3,000 dead, 800 prisoners, and more than 100 standards. The
+loss on the Dutch side was about 2,000.
+
+The Archduke Albert, who had narrowly escaped being himself taken
+prisoner, succeeded in entering Nieuport safely with what remained
+of his army. The town remained in the hands of the Spaniards, for
+Prince Maurice, after spending some days in vain attempts to capture
+it, marched with his whole force to Ostend, where soon afterwards
+began the celebrated siege, which was to last for three long years,
+and about which all Europe never tired of talking.[*]
+
+[Footnote *: 'Le siege d'Ostende fut, pendant ces trois ans, la
+fable et la nouvelle de l'Europe; on ne se lassait pas d'en parler.
+Des princes, des etrangers de toutes les nations venaient y
+assister.'--_L'Abbe Nameche_, xxi. 24.]
+
+[Illustration: NIEUPORT. The Town Hall.]
+
+The history of Nieuport since those days has been the history of
+a gradual fall. Its sea trade disappeared slowly but surely; the
+fishing industry languished; the population decreased year by year;
+and it has not shared to any appreciable extent in the prosperity
+which has enriched other parts of Flanders since the Revolution of
+1830. It is now a quiet, sleepy spot, with humble streets, which
+remind one of some fishing village on the east coast of Scotland.
+Men and women sit at the doors mending nets or preparing bait. The
+boats, with their black hulls and dark brown sails, move lazily
+up to the landing-stages, where a few small craft, trading along
+the coast, lie moored. Barges heavily laden with wood are pulled
+laboriously through the locks of the canals which connect the Yser
+with Ostend and Furnes. The ancient fortifications have long since
+disappeared, with the exception of a few grass-grown mounds; and
+only the grim tower of the Templars, standing by itself in a field
+on the outskirts of the town, remains to show that this insignificant
+place was once a mighty stronghold.
+
+In those old Flemish towns, however, it is always possible to find
+something picturesque; and here we have the Cloth Hall, with its
+low arches opening on the market-place, and the Gothic church,
+one of the largest in Flanders, with its porch and tower, where
+the bell-ringers play the chimes and the people pass devoutly to
+the services of the church. But that is all. Nieuport has few
+attractions nowadays, and is chiefly memorable in Flemish history
+because under its walls they fought that bloody 'Battle of the
+Dunes,' in which the stubborn strength and obstinacy of the Dutch
+overcame the fiery valour of the Spaniards.
+
+They are all well-nigh forgotten now, obstinate Dutchman and valiant
+Spaniard alike. Amongst the dunes not a vestige remains of the
+field-works for which they fought. Bones, broken weapons and shattered
+breastplates, and all the debris of the fight, were long ago buried
+fathoms deep beneath mounds of drifting sand. Old Nieuport--Nieuport
+Ville, as they call it now--for which so much blood was shed, is
+desolate and dreary with its small industries and meagre commerce;
+but a short walk to the north brings us to Nieuport-Bains, and to
+the gay summer life which pulsates all along the Flemish coast,
+from La Panne on the west to the frontiers of Holland.
+
+[Illustration: NIEUPORT. Church Port (Evensong).]
+
+
+
+
+THE COAST OF FLANDERS
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER X
+
+THE COAST OF FLANDERS
+
+To walk from Nieuport Ville to the Digue de Mer at Nieuport-Bains
+is to pass in a few minutes from the old Flanders, the home of
+so much romance, the scene of so many stirring deeds, from the
+market-places with the narrow gables heaped up in piles around
+them, from the belfries soaring to the sky, from the winding streets
+and the narrow lanes, in which the houses almost touch each other
+from the tumble-down old hostelries, from the solemn aisles where
+the candles glimmer and the dim red light glows before the altar,
+from the land of Bras-de-Fer, and Thierry d'Alsace, and Memlinc,
+and Van Eyck, and Rubens, the land which was at once the Temple
+and the Golgotha of Europe, into the clear, broad light of modern
+days.
+
+The Flemish coast, from the frontiers of France to the frontiers
+of Holland, is throughout the same in appearance. The sea rolls
+in and breaks upon the yellow beach, which extends from east to
+west for some seventy kilometres in an irregular line, unbroken
+by rocks or cliffs. Above the beach are the dunes, a long range
+of sandhills, tossed into all sorts of queer shapes by the wind,
+on which nothing grows but rushes or stunted Lombardy poplars,
+and which reach their highest point, the Hoogen-Blekker, about 100
+feet above the sea, near Coxyde, a fishing village four or five
+miles from Nieuport. Behind the dunes a strip of undulating ground
+('Ter Streep'), seldom more than a bare mile in width, covered with
+scanty vegetation, moss, and bushes, connects the barren sandhills
+with the cultivated farms, green fields, and woodlands of the Flemish
+plain. On the other side of the Channel the chalk cliffs and rocky
+coast of England have kept the waves in check; but the dunes were,
+for many long years, the only barrier against the encroachments
+of the sea on Flanders. They are, however, a very weak defence
+against the storms of autumn and winter. The sand drifts like snow
+before the wind, and the outlines of these miniature mountain ranges
+change often in a single night. At one time, centuries ago, this
+part of Flanders, which is now so bare, was, it is pretty clear,
+covered by forests, the remains of which are still sometimes found
+beneath the subsoil inland and under the sea. When the great change
+came is unknown, but the process was probably gradual. At an early
+period, here, as in Holland, the fight against the invasions of the
+sea began, and the first dykes are said to have been constructed
+in the tenth century. The first was known as the Evendyck, and
+ran from Heyst to Wenduyne. Others followed, but they were swept
+away, and now only a few traces of them are to be found, buried
+beneath the sand and moss.[*]
+
+[Footnote *: Bortier, _Le Littoral de la Flandre au IXe et au XIXe
+Siecles._]
+
+[Illustration: THE DUNES. A Stormy Evening.]
+
+The wild storms of the tenth, eleventh, and twelfth centuries changed
+the aspect of the coast of Flanders. Nieuport rose in consequence
+of one of these convulsions of Nature, when the inhabitants of
+Lombaerdzyde, which was then a seaport, were driven by the tempests
+to the inland village of Santhoven, the name of which they changed
+to 'Neoportus'--the new harbour. This was in the beginning of the
+twelfth century, and thenceforth the struggle against the waves
+went on incessantly. Lands were granted by Thierry d'Alsace on
+condition that the owner should construct dykes, and Baldwin of
+Constantinople appointed guardians of the shore, charged with the
+duty of watching the sea and constructing defensive works. But the
+struggle was carried on under the utmost difficulties. In the twelfth
+century the sea burst in with resistless force upon the low-lying
+ground, washing away the dunes and swallowing up whole towns. The
+inroads of the waves, the heavy rains, and the earthquakes, made
+life so unendurable that there were thousands who left their homes
+and emigrated to Germany.
+
+Later, in the thirteenth century, there was a catastrophe of appalling
+dimensions, long known as the 'Great Storm,' when 40,000 Flemish
+men and women perished. This was the same tempest which overran
+the Dutch coast, and formed the Zuyder Zee, those 1,400 square
+miles of water which the Dutch are about to reclaim and form again
+into dry land. In the following century the town of Scarphout, in
+West Flanders, was overwhelmed, and the inhabitants built a new
+town for themselves on higher ground, and called it Blankenberghe,
+which is now one of the most important watering-places on the coast.
+
+Ever since those days this constant warfare against the storms
+has continued, and the sea appears to be bridled; but anyone who
+has watched the North Sea at high tide on a stormy day beating
+on the shores of Flanders, and observed how the dunes yield to
+the pressure of the wind and waves, and crumble away before his
+eyes, must come to the conclusion that the peril of the ocean is
+not yet averted, and can understand the meaning of the great modern
+works, the _digues de mer_, or sea-fronts, as they would be called
+in England, which are being gradually constructed at such immense
+cost all along the coast.
+
+A most interesting and, indeed, wonderful thing in the recent history
+of the Netherlands is the rapid development of the Flemish littoral
+from a waste of sand, with here and there a paltry fishing hamlet
+and two or three small towns, into a great cosmopolitan pleasure
+resort. Seventy-five years ago, when Belgium became an independent
+country, and King Leopold I. ascended the throne, Ostend and Nieuport
+were the only towns upon the coast which were of any size; but
+Ostend was then a small fortified place, with a harbour wholly
+unsuited for modern commerce, and Nieuport, in a state of decadence,
+though it possessed a harbour, was a place of no importance. To-day
+the whole coast is studded with busy watering-places, about twenty
+of them, most of which have come into existence within the last
+fifteen years, with a resident population of about 60,000, which
+is raised by visitors in summer to, it is said, nearly 125,000. The
+dunes, which the old Counts of Flanders fought so hard to preserve
+from the waves, and which were at the beginning of the present
+century mere wastes of sand, a sort of 'no man's land,' of little
+or no use except for rabbit-shooting, are now valuable properties,
+the price of which is rising every year.
+
+The work of turning the sand into gold, for that is what the development
+of the Flemish coast comes to, has been carried out partly by the
+State and partly by private persons. In early times this belt of
+land upon the margin of the sea was held by the Counts of Flanders,
+who treated the ridge of sandhills above high-water mark as a natural
+rampart against the waves, and granted large tracts of the flat
+ground which lay behind to various religious houses. At the French
+Revolution these lands were sold as Church property at a very low
+figure, and were afterwards allowed, in many cases, to fall out of
+cultivation by the purchasers. So great a portion of the district
+was sold that at the present time only a small portion of the dune
+land is the property of the State--the narrow strip between Mariakerke
+and Middelkerke on the west of Ostend, and that which lies between
+Ostend and Blankenberghe on the east. The larger portions, which
+are possessed by private owners, are partly the property of the
+descendants of those who bought them at the Revolution, and partly
+of building societies, incorporated for the purpose of developing
+what Mr. Hall Caine once termed the 'Visiting Industry'--that is
+to say, the trade in tourists and seaside visitors.[*]
+
+[Footnote *: Letter to the Manx Reform League, November, 1903.]
+
+[Illustration: AN OLD FARMER]
+
+Plage de Westende, Le Coq, and Duinbergen--three charming summer
+resorts--have been created by building societies. Nieuport-Bains
+and La Panne have been developed by the owners of the adjoining
+lands, the families of Crombez and Calmeyn. Wenduyne, on the other
+hand, which lies between Le Coq and Blankenberghe, has been made
+by the State, while the management of Blankenberghe, Heyst, and
+Middelkerke, as bathing stations, is in the hands of their communal
+councils.
+
+On the coast of Flanders, Ostend--'La Reine des Plages'--is, it
+need hardly be said, the most important place, and its rise has
+been very remarkable. Less than fifty years ago the population was
+in all about 15,000. During the last fifteen years it has increased
+by nearly 15,000, and now amounts to about 40,000 in round numbers.
+The increase in the number of summer visitors has been equally
+remarkable. In the year 1860 the list of strangers contained 9,700
+names; three years ago it contained no less than 42,000. This floating
+population of foreign visitors who come to Ostend is cosmopolitan
+to an extent unknown at any watering-place in England. In 1902
+11,000 English, 8,000 French, 5,000 Germans, and 2,000 Americans
+helped to swell the crowds who walked on the sea-front, frequented
+the luxurious and expensive hotels, or left their money on the
+gaming-tables at the Kursaal. On one day--August 15, 1902--7,000
+persons bathed.[*]
+
+[Footnote *: I give these figures on the authority of M. Paul Otlet,
+Advocate, of Brussels, to whom I am indebted for much information
+regarding the development of the coast of Flanders. See also an
+article by M. Otlet in _Le Cottage_, May 15 to June 15, 1904.]
+
+Blankenberghe, with its 30,000 summer visitors, comes next in importance
+to Ostend, while both Heyst and Middelkerke are crowded during
+the season. But the life at these towns is not so agreeable as at
+the smaller watering-places. The hotels are too full, and have,
+as a rule, very little except their cheapness to recommend them.
+There is usually a body calling itself the _comite des fetes_,
+the members of which devote themselves for two months every summer
+to devising amusements, sports, and competitions of various kinds,
+instead of leaving people to amuse themselves in their own way,
+so that hardly a day passes on which the strains of a second-rate
+band are not heard in the local Kursaal, or a night which is not
+made hideous by a barrel-organ, to which the crowd is dancing on
+the _digue_. At the smaller places, however, though these also
+have their _comite des fetes_, one escapes to a great extent from
+these disagreeable surroundings.
+
+May, June, and September are the pleasantest months upon the coast
+of Flanders, for the visitors are not so numerous, and even in
+mid-winter the dunes are worth a visit. Then the hotels and villas
+fronting the sea are closed, and their windows boarded up. The
+bathing-machines are removed from the beach, and stand in rows in
+some sheltered spot. The _digue_, a broad extent of level brickwork,
+is deserted, and the wind sweeps along it, scattering foam and
+covering it with sand and sprays of tangled seaweed. The mossy
+surface of the dunes is frozen hard as iron, and often the hailstones
+rush in furious blasts before the wind. For league after league
+there is not a sign of life, except the sea-birds flying low near
+the shore, or the ships rising and falling in the waves far out
+to sea. In the winter months the coast of Flanders is bleak and
+stormy, but the air in these solitudes is as health-giving as in
+any other part of Europe.
+
+Of late years the Government, represented by Comte de Smet de Naeyer,
+has bestowed much attention on the development of the littoral,
+and King Leopold II. has applied his great business talents to
+the subject. Large sums of money have been voted by the Belgian
+Parliament for the construction of public works and the extension
+of the means of communication from place to place. There is a light
+railway, the 'Vicinal,' which runs along the whole coast, at a
+short distance from the shore, from Knocke, on the east, to La
+Panne in the extreme west, and which is connected with the system of
+State railways at various points. From Ostend, through Middelkerke,
+to Plage de Westende, an electric railway has been constructed,
+close to the beach and parallel to the Vicinal (which is about
+a mile inland), on which trains run every ten minutes during the
+summer season. As an instance of the speed and energy with which
+these works for the convenience of the public are carried out,
+when once they have been decided upon, it may be mentioned that the
+contract for the portion of the electric line between Middelkerke
+and Plage de Westende, a distance of about a mile and a half, was
+signed on May 9, that five days later 200 workmen began to cut
+through the dunes, embank and lay the permanent way, and that on
+June 25, in spite of several interruptions owing to drifting sand
+and heavy rains, the first train of the regular service arrived
+at Plage de Westende.
+
+[Illustration: LA PANNE. Interior of a Flemish Inn.]
+
+A large sum, amounting to several millions of francs, is voted
+every year for the protection of the shores of Flanders against
+the encroachments of the sea, by the construction of these solid
+embankments of brickwork and masonry, which will, in the course
+of a few years, extend in an unbroken line along the whole coast
+from end to end. The building of these massive sea-walls is a work
+of great labour and expense, for what seems to be an impregnable
+embankment, perhaps 30 feet high and 90 feet broad, solid and strong
+enough to resist the most violent breakers, will be undermined and
+fall to pieces in a few hours, if not made in the proper way. A
+_digue_, no matter how thick, which rests on the sand alone will
+not last. A thick bed of green branches bound together must first
+be laid down as a foundation: this is strengthened by posts driven
+through it into the sand. Heavy timbers, resting on bundles of
+branches lashed together, are wedged into the foundations, and
+slope inwards and upwards to within a few feet of the height to
+which it is intended to carry the _digue_. On the top another solid
+bed of branches is laid down, and the whole is first covered with
+concrete, and then with bricks or tiles, while the edge of the
+_digue_, at the top of the seaward slope, is composed of heavy blocks
+of stone cemented together and bound by iron rivets.
+
+_Digues_ made in this solid fashion, all of them higher above the
+shore than the Thames Embankment is above the river, and some of
+them broader than the Embankment, will, before very many years
+have passed, stretch along the whole coast of Flanders without
+a break, and will form not only a defence against the tides, but
+a huge level promenade, with the dunes on one side and the sea on
+the other. This is a gigantic undertaking, but it will be completed
+during the lifetime of the present generation.
+
+[Illustration: LA PANNE. A Flemish Inn--Playing Skittles.]
+
+Another grandiose idea, which is actually being carried into effect,
+is to connect all the seaside resorts on the coast of Flanders by
+a great boulevard, 40 yards wide, with a road for carriages and
+pedestrians, a track for motor-cars and bicycles, and an electric
+railway, all side by side. Large portions of this magnificent roadway,
+which is to be known as the 'Route Royale,' have already been completed
+between Blankenberghe and Ostend, and from Ostend to Plage de Westende.
+From Westende it will be continued to Nieuport-Bains, crossing the
+Yser by movable bridges, and thence to La Panne, and so onwards,
+winding through the dunes, over the French borders, and perhaps
+as far as Paris!
+
+A single day's journey through the district which this 'Route Royale'
+is to traverse will lead the traveller through the most interesting
+part of the dunes, and introduce him to most of the favourite _plages_
+on the coast of Flanders, and thus give him an insight into many
+characteristic Flemish scenes. La Panne, for instance, and Adinkerque,
+in the west and on the confines of France, are villages inhabited
+by fishermen who have built their dwellings in sheltered places
+amongst the dunes. The low white cottages of La Panne, with the
+strings of dried fish hanging on the walls, nestle in the little
+valley from which the place takes its name (for _panne_ in Flemish
+means 'a hollow'), surrounded by trees and hedges, gay with wild
+roses in the summer-time. Each cottage stands in its small plot
+of garden ground, and most of the families own fishing-boats of
+their own, and farm a holding which supplies them with potatoes
+and other vegetables.
+
+For a long time these cottages were the only houses at La Panne,
+which was seldom visited, except by a few artists; but about fifteen
+years ago the surveyors and the architects made their appearance,
+paths and roads were laid out, and, as if by magic, cottages and
+villas and the inevitable _digue de mer_ have sprung up on the
+dunes near the sea, and not very far from the original village. The
+chief feature of the new La Panne is that the houses are, except
+those on the sea-front, built on the natural levels of the ground,
+some perched on the tops of the dunes, and others in the hollows
+which separate them. The effect is extremely picturesque, and the
+example of the builders of La Panne is being followed at other places,
+notably at Duinbergen, one of the very latest bathing stations,
+which has risen during the last three years about a mile to the
+east of Heyst.
+
+Another very interesting place is the Plage de Westende, the present
+terminus of the electric railway from Ostend. The old village of
+Westende lies a mile inland on the highway between Nieuport and
+Ostend, close to the scene of the Battle of the Dunes. This Plage
+is, indeed, a model seaside resort, with a _digue_ which looks down
+upon a shore of the finest sand, and from which, of an evening,
+one sees the lights of Ostend in the east, and the revolving beacon
+at Dunkirk shining far away to the west. The houses which front
+the sea, all different from each other, are in singularly good
+taste; and behind them are a number of detached cottages and villas,
+large and small, in every variety of design. Ten years ago the
+site of this little town was a rabbit warren; now everything is
+up to date: electric light in every house, perfect drainage, a
+good water-supply, tennis courts, and an admirable hotel, where
+even the passing stranger feels at home. Though only three-quarters
+of an hour from noisy, crowded, bustling Ostend by the railway, it
+is one of the quietest and most comfortable places on the coast
+of Flanders, and can be reached by travellers from England in a
+few hours.
+
+Some years hence the lovely, peaceful Plage de Westende may have
+grown too big, but when the sand has all been turned into gold,
+and when the contractors and builders have grown rich, those who
+have known Westende in its earlier days will think of it as the
+quiet spot about which at one time only a few people used to stroll;
+where perhaps the poet Verhaeren found something to inspire him;
+where many a long summer's evening was spent in pleasant talk on
+history, and painting, and music by a little society of men and
+women who spoke French, or German, or English, as the fancy took
+them, and laughed, and quoted, and exchanged ideas on every subject
+under the sun; where the professor of music once argued, and sprang
+up to prove his point by playing--but that is an allusion, or, as
+Mr. Kipling would say, 'another story.'
+
+The district in which Westende lies, with Lombaerdzyde, Nieuport,
+Furnes, and Coxyde close together, is the most interesting on the
+coast of Flanders. Le Coq, on the other hand, is in that part of
+the dune country which has least historical interest, and is chiefly
+known as the place where the Royal Golf Club de Belgique has its
+course. It is only twenty minutes from Ostend on the Vicinal railway,
+which has a special station for golfers near the Club House. There
+is no _digue_, and the houses are dotted about in a valley behind
+the dunes. This place has a curious resemblance to a Swiss village.
+
+A few years ago the owners of lands upon the Flemish littoral began
+to grasp the fact that there was a sport called golf, on which
+Englishmen were in the habit of spending money, and that it would be
+an addition to the attractions of Ostend if, beside the racecourse,
+there was a golf-course. King Leopold, who is said to contemplate
+using all the land between the outskirts of Ostend and Le Coq for
+sporting purposes, paid a large sum, very many thousands of francs,
+out of his own pocket, and the golf-links at Le Coq were laid out.
+The Club House is handsome and commodious, but, unfortunately, the
+course itself, which is the main thing, is not very satisfactory,
+being far too artificial. The natural 'bunkers' were filled up,
+and replaced by ramparts and ditches like those on some inland
+courses in England. On the putting greens the natural undulations
+of the ground have been levelled, and the greens are all as flat
+and smooth as billiard-tables. There are clumps of ornamental wood,
+flower-beds, and artificial ponds with goldfish swimming in them. It
+is all very pretty, but it is hardly golf. What with the 'Grand Prix
+d'Ostende,' the 'Prix des Roses,' the 'Prix des Ombrelles, handicap
+libre, reserve aux Dames,' the 'Grand Prix des Dames,' and a number
+of other _objets d'art_, which are offered for competition on almost
+every day from the beginning of June to the end of September, this
+is a perfect paradise for the pot-hunter and his familiar friend
+Colonel Bogey. Real golf, the strenuous game, which demands patience
+and steady nerves, perhaps, more than any other outdoor game, is
+not yet quite understood by many Belgians; but the bag of clubs
+is every year becoming more common on the Dover mail-boats.
+
+Most of these golf-bags find their way to Knocke, where many of
+the English colony at Bruges spend the summer, and which, as the
+coast of Flanders becomes better known, is visited every year by
+increasing numbers of travellers from the other side of the Channel.
+Knocke is in itself one of the least attractive places on the Flemish
+littoral. The old village, a nondescript collection of houses, lies
+on the Vicinal railway about a mile from the sea, which is reached
+by a straight roadway, and where there is a _digue_, numerous hotels,
+pensions, and villas, all of which are filled to overflowing in the
+season. The air, indeed, is perfect, and there are fine views from
+the _digue_ and the dunes of the island of Walcheren, Flushing,
+and the estuary of the Scheldt; but the place was evidently begun
+with no definite plan: the dunes were ruthlessly levelled, and the
+result is a few unlovely streets, and a number of detached houses
+standing in disorder amidst surroundings from which everything
+that was picturesque has long since departed.
+
+But the dunes to the east are wide, and enclose a large space of
+undulating ground; and here the Bruges Golf and Sports Club has
+its links, which present a very complete contrast to the Belgian
+course at Le Coq. The links at Knocke, if somewhat rough and ready,
+are certainly sporting in the highest degree. Some of the holes,
+those in what is known as the Green Valley, are rather featureless;
+but in the other parts of the course there are numerous natural
+hazards, bunkers, and hillocks thick with sand and rushes. It has
+no pretentions to be a 'first-class' course (for one thing, it is
+too short), but in laying out the eighteen holes the ground has
+been utilized to the best advantage, and the Royal and Ancient
+game flourishes more at Knocke than at any other place in Belgium.
+The owners of the soil and the hotel-keepers, with a keen eye to
+business, and knowing that the golfing alone brings the English,
+from whom they reap a golden harvest, to Knocke, do all in their
+power to encourage the game, and it is quite possible that before
+long other links may be established along the coast. The soil of
+the strip behind the dunes is not so suitable for golf as the close
+turf of St. Andrews, North Berwick, or Prestwick, for in many places
+it consists of sand with a slight covering of moss; but with proper
+treatment it could probably be improved and hardened. It is merely
+a question of money, and money will certainly be forthcoming if
+the Government, the communes, and the private owners once see that
+this form of amusement will add to the popularity of the littoral.
+
+A short mile's walk to the west of Knocke brings us to Duinbergen,
+one of the newest of the Flemish _plages_, founded in the year
+1901 by the Societe Anonyme de Duinbergen, a company in which some
+members of the Royal Family are said to hold shares. At Knocke
+and others of the older watering-places everything was sacrificed
+to the purpose of making money speedily out of every available
+square inch of sand, and the first thing done was to destroy the
+dunes. But at Duinbergen the good example set by the founders of
+La Panne has been followed and improved upon, and nothing could
+be more _chic_ than this charming little place, which was planned
+by Herr Stuebben, of Cologne, an architect often employed by the
+King of the Belgians, whose idea was to create a small garden city
+among the dunes. The dunes have been carefully preserved; the roads
+and pathways wind round them; most of the villas and cottages have
+been erected in places from which a view of the sea can be obtained;
+and even the _digue_ has been built in a curve in order to avoid
+the straight line, which is apt to give an air of monotony to the
+rows of villas, however picturesque they may be in themselves,
+which face the sea at other places. So artistic is the appearance
+of the houses that the term 'Style Duinbergen' is used by architects
+to describe it. Electric lighting, a copious supply of water rising
+by gravitation to the highest houses, and a complete system of
+drainage, add to the luxuries and comforts of this _plage_, which
+is one of the best illustrations of the wonders which have been
+wrought among the dunes by that spirit of enterprise which has
+done so much for modern Flanders during the last few years.
+
+
+
+
+COXYDE--THE SCENERY OF THE DUNES
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XI
+
+COXYDE--THE SCENERY OF THE DUNES
+
+The whole of the coast-line is within the province of West Flanders,
+and its development in recent years is the most striking fact in
+the modern history of the part of Belgium with which this volume
+deals. The change which has taken place on the littoral during the
+last fifteen or twenty years is extraordinary, and the contrast
+between the old Flanders and the new, between the Flanders which
+lingers in the past and the Flanders which marches with the times,
+is brought vividly before us by the difference between such mediaeval
+towns as Bruges, Furnes, or Nieuport, and the bright new places
+which glitter on the sandy shores of the Flemish coast. But in
+almost every corner of the dunes, close to these signs of modern
+progress, there is something to remind us of that past history
+which is, after all, the great charm of Flanders.
+
+One of the most characteristic spots in the land of the dunes is
+the village of Coxyde, which lies low amongst the sandhills, about
+five miles west from Nieuport, out of sight of the sea, but inhabited
+by a race of fisherfolk who, curiously enough, pursue their calling
+on horseback. Mounted on their little horses, and carrying baskets
+and nets fastened to long poles, they go into the sea to catch
+small fish and shrimps. It is strange to see them riding about
+in the water, sometimes in bands, but more frequently alone or in
+pairs; and this curious custom, which has been handed down from
+father to son for generations, is peculiar to the part of the coast
+which lies between La Panne and the borders of France.
+
+Near Coxyde, and at the corner where the road from Furnes turns
+in the direction of La Panne, is a piece of waste ground which
+travellers on the Vicinal railway pass without notice. But here
+once stood the famous Abbey of the Dunes.
+
+[Illustration: COXYDE. A Shrimper on Horseback.]
+
+In the first years of the twelfth century a pious hermit named
+Lyger took up his abode in these solitary regions, built a dwelling
+for himself, and settled down to spend his life in doing good works
+and in the practice of religion. Soon, as others gathered round
+him, his dwelling grew into a monastery, and at last, in the year
+1122, the Abbey of the Dunes was founded. It was nearly half a
+century before the great building, which is said to have been the
+first structure of such a size built of brick in Flanders, was
+completed; but when at last the work was done the Abbey was, by all
+accounts, one of the most magnificent religious houses in Flanders,
+consisting of a group of buildings with no less than 105 windows,
+a rich and splendid church, so famous for its ornamental woodwork
+that the carvings of the stalls were reproduced in the distant
+Abbey of Melrose in Scotland, and a library which, as time went
+on, became a storehouse of precious manuscripts and hundreds of
+those wonderfully illustrated missals on which the monks of the
+Middle Ages spent so many laborious hours. We can imagine them
+in the cells of Coxyde copying and copying for hours together,
+or bending over the exquisitely coloured drawings which are still
+preserved in the museums of Flanders.
+
+But their most useful work was done on the lands which lay round
+the Abbey. There were at Coxyde in the thirteenth century no fewer
+than 150 monks and 248 converts engaged at one time in cultivating
+the soil.[*] They drained the marshes, and planted seeds where
+seeds would grow, until, after years of hard labour on the barren
+ground, the Abbey of the Dunes was surrounded by wide fields which
+had been reclaimed and turned into a fertile oasis in the midst
+of that savage and inhospitable desert.
+
+[Footnote *: Derode, _Histoire Religieuse de la Flandre Maritime_,
+p.86.]
+
+When St. Bernard was preaching the Crusade in Flanders he came to
+Coxyde. On his advice the monks adopted the Order of the Cistercians,
+and their first abbot under the new rule afterwards sat in the
+chair of St. Bernard himself as Abbot of Clairvaux. Thereafter
+the Cistercian Abbey of the Dunes grew in fame, especially under
+the rule of St. Idesbaldus, who had come there from Furnes, where
+he had been a Canon of the Church of Ste. Walburge. 'It has also a
+special interest for English folk. It long held lands in the isle
+of Sheppey, as well as the advowson of the church of Eastchurch,
+in the same island. These were bestowed on it by Richard the
+Lion-Hearted. The legend says that these gifts were made to reward
+its sixth abbot, Elias, for the help he gave in releasing Richard
+from captivity. Anyhow, Royal charters, and dues from the Archbishop
+of Canterbury, and a Bull of Pope Celestine III., confirmed the
+Abbey in its English possessions and privileges. The Abbey seems
+to have derived little benefit from these, and finally, by decision
+of a general congregation of the Cistercian Order, handed them over
+to the Abbot and Chapter of Bexley, to recoup the latter for the
+cost of entertaining monks of the Order going abroad, or returning
+from the Continent, on business of the Order.'[*]
+
+[Footnote *: Robinson, _Bruges, an Historical Sketch_, p. 176.]
+
+[Illustration: COXYDE. A Shrimper.]
+
+The English invasion of the fifteenth century destroyed the work
+of the monks in their fields and gardens, but the Abbey itself
+was spared; and the great disaster did not come until a century
+later, when the image-breakers, who had begun their work amongst the
+Gothic arches of Antwerp, spread over West Flanders, and descended
+upon Coxyde. The Abbey was attacked, and the monks fled to Bruges,
+carrying with them many of their treasures, which are still to
+be seen in the collection on the Quai de la Poterie, beyond the
+bridge which is called the Pont des Dunes. The noble building,
+so long the home of so much piety and learning, and from which so
+many generations of apostles had gone forth to toil in the fields
+and minister to the poor, was abandoned, and allowed to fall into
+ruins, until at last it gradually sunk into complete decay, and was
+buried beneath the sands. Not a trace of it now remains. History
+has few more piteous sermons to preach on the vanity of all the
+works of men.
+
+The fishermen on the coast of Flanders have, from remote times,
+paid their vows in the hour of danger to Notre Dame de Lombaerdzyde.
+If they escape from some wild storm they go on a pilgrimage of
+thanksgiving. They walk in perfect silence along the road to the
+shrine, for not a word must be spoken till they reach it; and these
+hardy seafaring men may be seen kneeling at the altar of the old,
+weather-beaten church which stands on the south side of the highway
+through the village, and in which are wooden models of ships hung
+up as votive offerings before an image of the Virgin, which is
+the object of peculiar veneration. The Madonna of Lombaerdzyde
+did not prevail to keep the sea from invading the village at the
+time when the inhabitants were driven to Nieuport, but the belief
+in her miraculous power is as strong to-day as it was in the Dark
+Ages.
+
+[Illustration: ADINKERQUE. Village and Canal.]
+
+There is a view of Lombaerdzyde which no one strolling on the dunes
+near Nieuport should fail to see--a perfect picture, as typical
+of the scenery in these parts as any landscape chosen by Hobbema
+or Ruysdael. A causeway running straight between two lofty dunes
+of bare sand, and bordered by stunted trees, forms a long vista at
+the end of which Lombaerdzyde appears--a group of red-roofed houses,
+with narrow gables and white walls, and in the middle the pointed
+spire of the church, beyond which the level plain of Flanders,
+dotted with other villages and churches and trees in formal rows,
+stretches away into the distance until it merges in the horizon.
+Adinkerque, a picturesque village beyond Furnes, is another place
+which calls to mind many a picture of the Flemish artists in the
+Musee of Antwerp and the Mauritshuis at The Hague; and the recesses
+of the dune country in which these places are hidden has a wonderful
+fascination about it--the irregular outlines of the dunes, some
+high and some low, sinking here into deep hollows of firm sand,
+and rising there into strange fantastic shapes, sometimes with
+sides like small precipices on which nothing can grow, and sometimes
+sloping gently downwards and covered with trembling poplars, spread
+in confusion on every side. Often near the shore the sandy barrier
+has been broken down by the wind or by the waves, and a long gulley
+formed, which cuts deep into the dunes, and through which the sand
+drifts inland till it reaches a steep bank clothed with rushes,
+against which it heaps itself, and so, rising higher with the storms
+of each winter, forms another dune. This process has been going
+on for ages. The sands are for ever shifting, but moss begins to
+grow in sheltered spots; such wild flowers as can flourish there
+bloom and decay; the poplars shed their leaves, and nourish by
+imperceptible degrees the fibres of the moss; some hardy grasses
+take root; and at length a scanty greensward appears. By such means
+slowly, in the microcosm of the dunes, have been evolved out of
+the changing sands places fit for men to live in, until now along
+the strip which guards the coast of Flanders there are green glades
+gay with flowers, and shady dells, and gardens sheltered from the
+wind, plots of pasture-land, cottages and churches which seem to
+grow out of the landscape, their colouring so harmonizes with the
+colouring which surrounds them. And ever, close at hand, the sea is
+rolling in and falling on the shore. 'Come unto these yellow sands,'
+and when the sun is going down, casting a long bar of burnished
+gold across the water, against which, perhaps, the sail of some
+boat looms dark for a moment and then passes on, the sky glows
+in such a lovely, tender light that those who watch it must needs
+linger till the twilight is fading away before they turn their faces
+inland. There are few evenings for beauty like a summer evening
+on the shores of Flanders.
+
+
+
+
+INDEX
+
+Abbey of the Dunes; of Melrose
+Adinkerque
+'Adoration of the Immaculate Lamb'
+Albert, Archduke, portrait at Furnes; at the Battle of the Dunes,
+ marries the Infanta Isabella; character of; wounded
+Albert, Prince, at Bruges
+Ancona, Bishop of
+Andre, St., village of
+Ane Aveugle, Rue de l'
+Angelo, Michael
+Anglaises, Couvent des Dames
+Antwerp, Cathedral of
+Arschot, Duc d'
+Artevelde, Jacques van
+Artevelde, Philip van
+Artois, Comte d'
+Augustinian Nuns
+
+Baldwin, Bras-de-Fer, real founder of Bruges; defends Flanders;
+ marries Judith; builds Church of St. Donatian
+Baldwin, King of Jerusalem
+Baldwin of Constantinople
+Baldwin VII.
+Bannockburn
+Bardi, money-changers at Bruges
+Bassin de Commerce at Bruges
+Battle of the Dunes _et seq._
+Battle of the Golden Spurs _et seq._
+Beguinage at Bruges; grove of
+Behuchet, Nicholas
+Belfry of Bruges
+Belgian Parliament passes law for harbour near Heyst
+Berlaimont, Comte Florent de
+Bernard, St., of Clairvaux
+Bertulf, Provost of St. Donatian
+Bexley
+Bicycles, import duty on 'Bird of Honour'
+Blankenberghe, new harbour near; English fleet at, in 1340
+Boniface VIII.
+Bouchoute, Hotel de
+Borthwick, Colonel
+Boterbeke
+Bourg, Place du, at Bruges
+Brangwyn, William
+Breidel, John
+Breskens
+Bristol, Earl of, at Bruges
+Bruges, described by John of Ypres; origin of name; primitive
+ township of; boundaries in early times; Market-Place; Halles; early
+ trade; the Loove at; growth of; capital of West Flanders; Baldwin
+ Bras-de-Fer its real founder; Place du Bourg; murder of Charles the
+ Good; Joanna of Navarre at; death of Marie, wife of Maximilian; Hotel
+ de Ville; Customs House; Oriental appearance in Middle Ages; produce
+ sent to, in Middle Ages; Hanseatic League at; Consulates at;
+ splendour of, in Middle Ages; under the House of Burgundy; loss of
+ trade; pauperism; Charles II. at _et seq._; list of Charles II.'s
+ household at; death of Catherine of Braganza at; fate of Church at
+ French Revolution; Napoleon at; state of, since Revolution of 1830;
+ English Jesuits at; Queen Victoria at; relic of Holy Blood at
+ _et seq._; Procession of the Holy Blood _et seq._; relic of the
+ Holy Cross
+Bruges Matins
+Brussels, Charles II. at; Church of Ste. Gudule; Hotel de Ville
+Burchard
+Burgundy, Charles, Duke of
+Burgundy, House of
+Burnet, Bishop
+Butler, Mr. J.
+
+Caine, Mr. Hall
+'Cairless,' Mr.
+Capucins, Chapel of, at Furnes
+Casa Negra
+Cathedral of Antwerp
+Cathedral of St. Martin at Ypres
+Cathedral of St. Sauveur at Bruges
+Catherine of Braganza
+Celestine III.
+Chapel of the Capucins at Furnes
+Chapelle du Saint-Sang (St. Basil's) at Bruges
+Charlemagne
+Charles II. of England at Bruges _et seq._
+Charles the Bald
+Charles the Bold
+Charles the Good
+Charles V.
+Charles VI.
+Chatillon, Jacques de
+Chemins-de-fer Vicinaux
+Church of Jerusalem at Bruges
+Church of Notre Dame at Bruges
+Church of St. Donatian at Bruges
+Church of Ste. Walburge
+Cistercians
+Clairvaux
+Clauwerts
+Clement V.
+Clement VII.
+Cologne
+Comte de la Hanse
+Congress of Vienna
+Coninck, Peter de
+Consulate of France; of Spain; of Smyrna
+Coolkerke
+Courtrai
+Couvent des Dames Anglaises
+Coxyde
+Cranenberg
+Crecy, Battle of
+Cromwell
+Customs House at Bruges
+
+Dalgetty, Dugald
+Damme _et seq._; population of; Roeles de; harbour blocked up
+Dampierre, Guy de
+David, Gerard
+Deprysenaere, Jean of Ypres
+_Digues de mer_, construction of
+Donatian, Church of St., built by Baldwin Bras-de-Fer; Bertulf,
+ Provost of; site of; murder of Charles the Good in; destroyed
+Don John of Austria
+Dordrecht
+Duinbergen
+Dunes, Battle of the; scenery of _et seq._
+Dyver, the, at Bruges
+
+Edward III.
+Edward IV.
+Egmont, Count
+Elias, sixth Abbot of Coxyde
+English Merchant Adventurers
+Erembalds _et seq._; feud with Straetens; destruction of Ethelbald
+Ethelwulf, husband of Judith, daughter of Charles the Bald Evendyck
+Eyck, van, elder and younger
+
+Flanders, state of, in early times; invaded by Normans; origin of title
+ 'Count of'; defended by Baldwin Bras-de-Fer; allied to England;
+ neutrality of, in 1340 and 1830; invaded by French; plain of _et seq._;
+ ignorance of country people in; smuggling between France and; annexed
+ to France; invaded by English; causes of disunion in; ceded to the
+ Infanta Isabella; contrast between different parts of; coast of _et seq._
+Flotte, Pierre, Chancellor of France
+Flushing
+Fox, Sir Stephen
+France, Flanders annexed to
+France, Palais du
+French Consulate at Bruges
+Furnes; procession of penitents at; Church of Ste. Walburge; Hotel de
+ Ville and Palais de Justice; Church of St. Nicholas; Corps de Garde
+ Espagnol and Pavillon des Officiers Espagnols
+
+Gand, Porte de
+Gardiner, Dr., quoted
+Gauthier de Sapignies
+Genoese merchants, house of, at Bruges
+George III.
+Germany, emigrations from Flanders to Ghent
+Ghiselhuis
+Gilliat-Smith, author of _The Story of Bruges_
+Gloucester, Henry, Duke of _et seq._
+Godshuisen
+Golden Fleece, Order of the
+Golden Spurs, Battle of the
+Golf in Belgium
+'Governor of the English Colony beyond the Seas'
+Grande Dame of Beguinage
+Grande Salle des Echevins at Bruges
+Great storm of thirteenth century
+Gruthuise
+Guildhouse of St. Sebastian at Bruges
+Gustavus Adolphus
+Guy de Dampierre
+
+Haecke, Canon van
+Halle de Drapiers at Ypres
+Halle de Paris at Bruges
+Halles at Bruges
+Hamilton, Sir James
+Hanseatic League
+Het Paradijs
+Heyst
+Hobbema
+Hogarth
+Holland, Beguinages in
+Holy Blood, relic and chapel of, at Bruges; Procession of the
+Holy Cross, relic of
+Holy Sepulchre, Church of, at Jerusalem
+Hoogenblekker
+Horn, Count
+Hotel de Bouchoute at Bruges
+Hotel de Ville at Bruges; at Furnes
+House of the Seven Towers
+Hyde (Lord Clarendon)
+
+Idesbaldus, St.
+Inquisition in Flanders
+Isabella, the Infanta
+
+Jerusalem, Baldwin, King of
+Jerusalem, Church of, at Bruges
+Jesse, _Memoirs of the Court of England_
+Jesuits at Bruges
+Joanna of Navarre
+John of Ypres
+Joseph II.
+Joseph of Arimathaea
+Judith, wife of Baldwin Bras-de-Fer
+Justice, Palais du, at Bruges; at Furnes
+
+Kadzand
+Kermesse
+King, Thomas Harper
+Knights of the Golden Fleece
+Knocke
+
+Lac d'Amour
+La Panne
+Le Coq
+_Legend of Montrose_
+Lejeusne, Mathurin
+Leliarts
+Leonius
+Leopold I.
+Leopold II.
+Lilly the astrologer
+Lincoln, Bishop of
+Lombaerdzyde
+Longfellow, quoted
+Loove, the, at Bruges
+Louis of Maele
+Louis of Nevers
+Louis XIV.
+Louvain
+Luxembourg
+Lyger
+
+Maele, Louis of
+Maison des Orientaux
+Mannaert
+Marbriers, Quai des
+Mariakerke
+Maria Theresa
+Market-Place of Bruges
+Mary, 'The Gentle'
+Matins of Bruges
+Maurice of Nassau
+Mauritshuis at The Hague
+Maximilian, Archduke
+Mazarin
+Melrose Abbey
+Memlinc
+Meuninxhove, John van
+Michael Angelo
+Middelkerke
+Minnewater
+Miracles wrought by the Holy Blood at Bruges
+Morgarten
+Mother Superior of Beguinage
+Murray, Sir Robert
+
+Napoleon at Bruges; return from Elba; canal to Sluis
+ constructed by
+Navarre, Joanna of
+Neutrality of Flanders in 1340 and 1830
+Nevers, Louis of
+Nicholas I., Pope
+Nicholas, Sir Edward
+Nieuport; origin of; besieged by Prince Maurice; fallen state of
+Nieuport-Bains
+'Nieuwerck,' at Ypres
+Nimeguen, Treaty of
+Nivelles
+Noe, Michael
+Normans in Flanders
+Norwich, Earl of
+Notre Dame, Church of, at Bruges
+Notre Dame de Lombaerdzyde
+Notre Dame de Thuine
+
+'Old England' at Bruges
+Oosterlingen Plaats
+Oostkerke
+Orientaux, Maison des; Place des
+Ormonde
+Osburga
+Ostend, growth of
+Otlet, M. Paul _note_
+Ouden Burg
+
+Palais de Justice, at Bruges; at Furnes
+Palais du Franc
+Paradijs, Het
+Parijssche Halle
+Paris
+Parma, Duke of, in Flanders
+Pauperism of Bruges
+Philip II. cedes Spanish Netherlands to his daughter
+Philip III.
+Philip of Valois
+Philip the Fair
+Place des Orientaux
+Place du Bourg
+Pont des Dunes
+Pope Clement V.; VII.; Boniface VIII.; Celestine III.; Urban VI.
+Poperinghe
+Porte de Damme
+Porte de Gand
+Porte Ste. Croix
+Procession of the Holy Blood at Bruges _et seq._; of Penitents at Furnes
+Pruyssenaere, Peter
+
+Quai Espagnol; Long; des Marbriers; du Miroir; de la Potterie; du Rosaire;
+ Spinola; Vert
+
+Rastadt, Treaty of
+Richard I.
+Robinson, Mr. Wilfrid, author of _Bruges, an Historical Sketch_
+Rochester, Earl of
+Rodenbach
+Roeles de Damme
+Rome, flight of Baldwin and Judith to
+Roosebeke, Battle of
+Rosaire, Quai du
+Roulers
+Route Royale
+Roya
+Rue Anglaise, in Bruges; de l'Ane Aveugle; des Carmes; Cour de Gand;
+ Espagnole; Flamande; Haute; Neuve; du Vieux Bourg Ruysdael
+
+Santhoven
+Scarphout
+'Schielt ende Vriendt'
+Schomberg
+Schoutteeten
+'Scotland,' at Bruges
+Scottish merchants at Bruges
+Scott, Sir Walter
+See-Brugge
+Senlis
+Sheppey, Isle of
+Sluis
+Smith, Gilliat-
+Smet de Naeyer, Comte
+Smyrna, Consulate of, at Bruges
+Spaniards, at Bruges; at Furnes
+Spanish Inquisition
+Spencer, Henry, Bishop of Norwich
+St. Andre, Village of
+St. Basil, Church of
+St. Bavon
+St. Bernard of Clairvaux
+St. Donatian, Church of
+St. George, Society of
+St. Idesbaldus
+St. John, Hospital of
+St. Martin, Church of, at Furnes
+St. Nicholas, Church of, at Furnes
+St. Omer, Jesuits of
+St. Peter's, at Ghent
+St. Sauveur, Church of
+St. Sebastian, Society of, at Bruges; at Ypres
+Ste. Elizabeth, Church of
+Ste. Gudule, Church of
+Ste. Monica, Church of
+Ste. Walburge, Church of, at Bruges; at Furnes
+Straetens
+Stuebben, Herr
+Swift, Dean
+Sybilla, wife of Thierry d'Alsace
+Sydenham, Colonel
+Syria
+
+Tarah, Viscount
+'Ter Streep'
+Thierry d'Alsace _et seq._
+'Thuindag'
+Thurloe State papers
+Titelman the Inquisitor
+Torquemada
+Tournai
+'Tower of London' at Bruges
+Turner, Sir James
+
+Valois, Philip of
+Van Eyck
+Vauban, fortifies Ypres
+Verhaeren, M., Belgian poet
+Vienna, Congress of
+Vieux Bourg, Rue du
+Virgin and Child, Statue of, at Bruges
+
+Urban VI.
+
+Victoria, Queen, at Bruges
+
+Walburge, Ste., Church of, at Bruges; at Furnes
+Walcheren
+Waterloo, Battle of
+Weavers, Guild of
+Wenduyne
+Westcapelle
+Westende, village; Plage
+William, Bishop of Ancona
+
+York, Duke of, at Bruges _et seq._
+Ypres; field preaching near; churches sacked; taken by Parma; by the
+ Protestants; Place du Musee; besieged by Louis XIV.; fortified by
+ Vauban; ceded to France; described by Vauban in 1689; taken by the
+ French in 1794; during the Hundred Days; end of military history;
+ Grand Place and Cloth Hall; monopoly of weaving linen; manages with
+ Bruges the Hanseatic League in Flanders; the Nieuwerck; riots at;
+ siege of, by English _et seq._; John of Ypres describes early Bruges
+Yser
+
+Zwijn
+Zuyder Zee
+
+
+
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