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Lucas, E. V. (Edward Verrall), 1868-1938

"A Wanderer in Holland"

Nicholas--Middelburg's
art--Sentimental songs--The great Tacius--The siege of
Middelburg--A round-faced city--When disfigurement is
beauty--Green paint--Long John--Music in the night--Foolish
Betsy--The Stadhuis--An Admiral and stuffed birds--The law
of the paving-stones--Veere--The prey of the sea--A mammoth
church--Maximilian's cup.
With Middelburg I have associated, for charm, Hoorn; but Middelburg
stands first. It is serener, happier, more human; while the nature of
the Zeelander is to the stranger so much more ingratiating than that
of the North Hollander. The Zeelander--and particularly the Walcheren
islander--has the eccentricity to view the stranger as a natural
object rather than a phenomenon. Flushing being avowedly cosmopolitan
does not count, but at Middelburg, the capital of Zeeland, you may,
although the only foreigner there, walk about in the oddest clothes
and receive no embarrassing attentions.
It is not that the good people of Walcheren are quicker to see
where their worldly advantage lies. They are not schemers or
financiers. The reason resides in a native politeness, a heritage,
some have conjectured, from their Spanish forefathers. One sees hints
of Spanish blood also in the exceptional flexibility and good carriage
of the Walcheren women.


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