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قراءة كتاب The Spell of Belgium

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The Spell of Belgium

The Spell of Belgium

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دار النشر: Project Gutenberg
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THE SPELL OF BELGIUM

By
Isabel Anderson


THE SPELL OF BELGIUM



Grande Place and Belfry, Furnes

(See page 249)


The Spell of
Belgium

ILLUSTRATED

BOSTON
THE PAGE COMPANY
PUBLISHERS

Copyright, 1915, by
The Page Company
All rights reserved

Made in U.S.A.

First Impression, October, 1915
Second Impression, January, 1916
Third Impression, June, 1917
Fourth Impression, March, 1919
Fifth Impression, January, 1922

PRINTED BY C. H. SIMONDS COMPANY
BOSTON, MASS., U.S.A.

DEDICATED
WITH AFFECTION TO
MY GODCHILD
CHARLES PELHAM GREENOUGH
MAY HE BE AS BRAVE AS
THE BELGIANS


FOREWORD

Belgium has contributed generously to the world in the past. Much has been destroyed in this ruthless war, but much remains, for Belgium had much to give. How splendid are her unique guild-halls with their fretted towers, her massive mediæval gates and quaint old houses bordering the winding canals!

Through centuries, in one way or another, she has continued to hold the world’s admiration. In olden times, when the clever weavers wrought historic scenes in their Flemish tapestries, they surely wove into the hearts of our forefathers the Spell of Belgium. In Belgium, the home of the violin, we have listened to the magic strains of the great masters and been charmed by the musical verses of Maeterlinck. There, too, we have gazed upon her inimitable Rubens and van Eycks. But today we stand spellbound before the Belgians themselves, the heroes of this war.

The legends of Antwerp were written out by the eminent Flemish historian, Sleeckx, over fifty years ago, and were found in the library at Antwerp. This version has been translated directly from the Flemish, and is believed to be unknown to the world, outside of Antwerp literary circles.

I wish to thank Her Excellency, Madame Havenith, wife of the Belgian Minister in the United States, for information, letters and photographs, and Mrs. Abbot L. Dow, whose father, General Sanford, was one of the most popular American Ministers ever in Belgium, as well as Miss Helen North, who lived for many years in that beautiful country. I wish, also, to thank the National Magazine for the use of a portion of the chapter on Motoring in Flanders. My thanks are due to Miss Gilman and Miss Crosby, too, for their kind assistance.


CONTENTS

CHAPTER   PAGE
  Foreword vii
I. The New Post 1
II. Diplomatic Life 20
III. Brussels Before the War 43
IV. In Days of Knight and Villain 65
V. Battling for a Kingdom 86
VI. Belgian Kings 106
VII. Politics and Plural Voting 126
VIII. Belgium’s Workshops 138
IX. Tapestries 158
X. Primitives and Later Painters 178
XI. La Jeune Belgique in Letters 207
XII. Motoring in Flanders 230
XIII. Legends of Antwerp 255
XIV. In the Walloon Country

Pages