After a long hot summer, with long light days starting early,
suddenly it is still dark when I get out of bed at 6.00 o’clock! It
is just light when I leave the building at 7.40 to go swimming and
still warm but it is also a gentle reminder of the approaching Autumn
with its shorter days. But Autumn brings promises of cosy afternoons
and winter treats; and mulled wine and Christmas markets; lighted
shops and cafes luring in cold customers. Always something to look
forward to in seasonal changes!
Virginia Woolf by Roger Fry c1917 |
of autumnal, often wintry, bleakness, crowd his narrative. The sun never shines on Le Carillonneur.
Interestingly, Alan Hollinghurst writes:
“Rather
like A.E.Housman laying claim to an imagined Shropshire while walking
on Hampstead Heath, Rodenbach evoked the dead city where he had never
lived from his Paris apartment. "One only truly loves
what
one no longer has", he wrote. "Truly to love one's little
homeland, it is best to go away, to exile oneself for ever, to
surrender oneself to the vast absorption of Paris, and for the
homeland to grow so distant it seems to die.”
Rodenbach would certainly not have recognised the joyful tourist-thronged town evident for the last several months, full of free events like the Song of Freedom in tribute to the 100th anniversary of the ending of WW1 over the last two evenings in the Burg where a free film had been screened a few days before. Nor the big Local Heroes celebration in Astrid Park tonight. A week ago Benenwerk, the dance celebration at various venues in the Egg entertained many thousands while Moods, a virtual month-long pop concert at free points around the centre, drew happy crowds in July and August. There is so much happening in Brugge all summer which invites thousands to love it for its life while Rodenbach loved Brugge for its melancholy dying.
Rodenbach would certainly not have recognised the joyful tourist-thronged town evident for the last several months, full of free events like the Song of Freedom in tribute to the 100th anniversary of the ending of WW1 over the last two evenings in the Burg where a free film had been screened a few days before. Nor the big Local Heroes celebration in Astrid Park tonight. A week ago Benenwerk, the dance celebration at various venues in the Egg entertained many thousands while Moods, a virtual month-long pop concert at free points around the centre, drew happy crowds in July and August. There is so much happening in Brugge all summer which invites thousands to love it for its life while Rodenbach loved Brugge for its melancholy dying.
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