When it came to deciding on a honeymoon location, N and I
were in swift agreement: Bruges. It had to be Bruges.
We’re both fans of the darkly, bitterly funny film, In Bruges with Brendan Gleeson and Colin Farrell, which also contains one of the finest comedy gangster performances you’re ever likely to see Ralph Fiennes deliver.
So we set ourselves in the direction of the “fahkin’ fairytale” medieval cobbled city at the end of October. I’d booked a medieval (there is a theme in Bruges) cottage right next to the canal and then booked the Eurostar so we could feel all green and smug. A feeling that quickly evaporated when we realised we were seated facing backwards and my sea sickness (so much worse now that the perimenopause has kicked in) took a fierce grip.
But we made it. 7 hours of travelling, 4 trains. Green with
sickness and smuggery, one of us at least, we staggered from the final station
with one wheelie suitcase and one partly wheelie (it lost a wheel en route) case
that had to be carried, and straight into a town more well preserved than David
Dimbleby. As we passed along the streets, the lights became dimmer. The walls
of the houses were punctuated with niches in which sat Mary and Jesus in
various states of decoration and decay, looking down as we cringed at the sound
of our own approach. Mullioned windows blinked the subdued streetlights at us
as we and a handful of other brave souls headed for our respective staying
places.
The house was beautiful (although there was a noticeable
lack of tea bags and milk on our arrival – this is the very last time I
use Air BNB) and only a few minutes’ walk from the very centre of things: the
Markt, the tower, the museums, the churches. There are a lot of churches – this
is a deeply Catholic country. Our longest walk was on the 1st day
when we went to see the Jeruzalemkerk* to the north(ish) of the city. This was
one of the film spots, but also, just somewhere I wanted to visit because I
have a passion for old churches and N is kind enough to tolerate that. Or at
least lean against a wall outside looking up nearby battlesites while I go
knock myself out.
Houses in Bruges can go for over 1 million euro, the chap
leading the canal boat tour (yes, we did). Leading you to wonder where the real
people are when they are not selling us postcards, taking us on carriage rides
(no, we didn’t) or serving us terrible beer (much head, little liquid, for
god’s sake don’t complain or ask them to top the glass up…they really
don’t like that, keep quiet, order your moules et frites and make a mental note
to only drink wine for the rest of the trip).
The coffee was delicious. Short little cups, drained in 3
gulps, but rich and aromatic, served with cream not thin and unsatisfying milk.
Hot and revivifying in a way I had forgotten coffee could be. Everywhere it is
served with a little speculoos biscuit – that lovely caramel, slightly spicy
biscuit – apart from one memorable occasion where it came with a little dish of
nougat and marzipan made on the premises. A marzipan made with real almonds,
not a whiff of essence in tastebud reach, it was a completely different beast
to the sort we cover our claggy fruit cakes with. I brought quite a lot of it
to take home.
We saw extraordinary art – Bosch and van Eyck and Memling.
At the Groeninge, halfway through, there is an extraordinary painting in the
chiascuro style, of a young woman and her lover, the candlelight giving her a
luminosity that made me cry. I brought a print to bring home where now, in the
lamplight, it glows again. At the St-Janshospitaal, there was a splendid
exhibition on the assumption of Mary as depicted in art through the ages.
There I found a wonderful olive wood carving and Books of Hours that were rich
with colour and devotion. The Gruuthuse Museum was full, packed to the gills
with interesting things, some of which dated back to the Iron Age. At last!
Something older than medieval! There is a surprising lack of natural history in
Bruges. It’s like nothing happened here until God moved in.
*I’m currently posting this with no WiFi due to complicated
BT-engineer-based reasons, so I’ll add links another day
**We took precisely 1 selfie because otherwise, how would we prove we’d been there? But there was absolutely no giggling. Serious selfies befitting of our Great Age (personal age, I mean. There is nothing great about this political age).
**We took precisely 1 selfie because otherwise, how would we prove we’d been there? But there was absolutely no giggling. Serious selfies befitting of our Great Age (personal age, I mean. There is nothing great about this political age).
Winner of this year's "Nicest Pub Dog with
Silkiest Ears" award

























Bruges is one of those places I would love to visit but I know that my husband would absolutely hate. He doesn't like anything vaguely cultural. I am reading a book about the Dutch at the moment and had no idea about the history of Holland and Belgium and how it was one country once and how it became two.
ReplyDeleteI guess if you have walked on cobbles all your life you would get used to them, high heals and all?
Hope your feet have recovered now, your honeymoon sounds wonderful.
Ah yes, the culture. It's a bit inescapable there. And everywhere, to be honest. I once had a 'lively' debate with someone about how even football was culture, but I'll spare you that!
DeleteIt was wonderful, thank you :)