Beautiful Europe - Belgium By Joseph E. Morris






























































































 -  It is remarkable,
certainly, that these soaring spires should thus chiefly rise to
eminence in a setting of dead, flat - Page 5
Beautiful Europe - Belgium By Joseph E. Morris - Page 5 of 44 - First - Home

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It Is Remarkable, Certainly, That These Soaring Spires Should Thus Chiefly Rise To Eminence In A Setting Of Dead, Flat Plain.

It may well be, indeed, as some have suggested, that the character of architecture is unconsciously determined by the

Type of surrounding scenery; that men do not build spires in the midst of mountains to compete with natural sublimity that they cannot hope to emulate, but are emboldened to express in stone and mortar their own heavenward aspirations in countries where Nature seems to express herself in less spiritual, or at any rate in less ambitious, mood.

As we cross the level prairie between these two little towns of West Flanders (we hope to visit them presently), a group of lofty roofs and towers is seen grandly towards the west, dominating the fenland with hardly less insistency than Boston "Stump," in Lincolnshire, as seen across Wash and fen. This is the little town of Furnes, than which one can hardly imagine a quainter place in Belgium, or one more entirely fitted as a doorway by which to enter a new land. Coming straight from England by way of Calais and Dunkirk, the first sight of this ancient Flemish market-place, with its unbroken lines of old white-brick houses, many of which have crow-stepped gables; with the two great churches of St. Nicholas, with its huge square tower, and of St. Walburge, with its long ridge of lofty roof; and with its Hotel de Ville and Palais de Justice of about the dawn of the seventeenth century, is a revelation, in its atmosphere of sleepy evening quiet, to those who rub their eyes with wonder, and find it hard to credit that London, "with its unutterable, external hideousness," was actually left behind them only that very morning, and is actually at present not two hundred miles distant.

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