As I do the countless chores preparatory to moving my home from Bruges to Bury St Edmunds, I feel pressured, especially with the myriad tasks essential to keeping Customs happy enough to let me back in, without charging me punitive taxes. I cannot help but remember February 5th 2015 when I made the reverse trip. I just booked a Removals firm from the next village; dates to suit were arranged; men came and packed then drove off to Bruges on February 4, moving my household possessions in through the
Part of the narrative of ... |
.. |
......the Wintergloed, Walk of Light. |
In addition there are POAs for both Belgian and British Customs submitted by PDF; lengthy [approaching two months] enquiries and demands to ascertain my real identity and how I managed to obtain the money to buy a small, two bed flat in Bury. The latter would not be necessary were I to rent in Bury but I am buying which complicates matters a lot apparently! [En passant, it seems ageist that a person of 87 is not allowed to raise a small mortgage. Post relocation, I am going to discover who my new-to-me M.P. is and write to complain about this.]
In the meantime I walk, when I have time, along canals, admiring this jewel of a little mediaeval
Not only picturesque canals, but also dramatic skies to take the eye. |
The Grote Markt |
Brugge’s
history is a story of a thousand years of early peasant economy,
great lords and powerful families, interminable wars and armed
uprisings, occupation by ‘others’ with Bruges freed only by counter
occupations. The seventeenth century religious wars led to the
partition of the Low Countries and eventually to a nineteenth century
of prolonged poverty and stagnation. It was during this period that
George Rodenbach’s Bruges La Morte, and his Le Carillonneur were
published both to wide acclaim and prompt disparagement! For
Bruggelingen Rodenbach’s stories were perhaps too near the truth! But they caught the then contemporary melancholy mood and the grey inertia. But the
new port of Zeebrugge [1905-8] brought industrialisation and increasing
prosperity and led to the twentieth century and a widening awareness
of the exquisite charms of Brugge, an almost perfectly preserved [or
renewed] little mediaeval city. Delighted tourists arrived in increasing numbers
bringing fame and money which sparked its present affluence, displayed in the
numerous golden flourishes on old buildings, the unbelievable
cleanliness and tidiness, the variety of rich processions and events, the literary wealth of the Library and Archives and the art treasures in museums. This is truly a place for aesthetes and historians!
Golden statues adorn the facade of the Basilica of the Holy Blood in the Burg. |