From the Log of the Velsa
CONTENTS
THE skipper, who, in addition to being a yachtsman, is a Dutchman, smiled with calm assurance as we approached the Dutch frontier in the August evening over the populous water of the canal which leads from Ghent to Terneuzen. He could not abide Belgium, possibly because it is rather like Holland in some ways. In his opinion the bureaucrats of Belgium did not understand yachts and the respect due to them, whereas the bureaucrats of Holland did. Holland was pictured for me as a paradise where a yacht with a seventy-foot mast never had to wait a single moment for a bridge to be swung open. When I inquired about custom-house formalities, I learned that a Dutch custom-house did not exist for a craft flying the sacred blue ensign of the British Naval Reserve. And it was so. Merely depositing a ticket and a tip into the long-handled butterfly-net dangled over our deck by the bridge-man as we passed, we sailed straight into Holland, and no word said! But we knew immediately that we were in another country—a country cleaner and neater and more garnished even than Belgium. The Terneuzen Canal, with its brickwork banks and its villages “finished” to the last tile, reminded me of the extravagant, oily perfection of the main tracks of those dandiacal railroads, the North Western in England and the Pennsylvania in America. The stiff sailing breeze was at length favorable. We set the mainsail unexceptionably; and at once, with the falling dusk, the wind fell, and the rain too. We had to depend again on our erratic motor, with all Holland gazing at us. Suddenly the whole canal was lit up on both sides by electricity. We responded with our lights. The exceedingly heavy rain drove me into the saloon to read Dostoyevsky.
At eight P. M. I was dug up out of the depths of Dostoyevsky in order to see my first Dutch harbor. Rain poured through the black night. There was a plashing of invisible wavelets below, utter darkness above, and a few forlorn lights winking at vast distances. I was informed that we were moored in the yacht-basin of Terneuzen. I remained calm. Had we been moored in the yacht-basin of Kamchatka, the smell of dinner would still have been issuing from the forecastle-hatch, the open page of Dostoyevsky would still have invited me through the saloon skylight, and the amiable ray of the saloon lamp would still have glinted on the piano and on the binnacle with impartial affection. Herein lies an advantage of yachting over motoring. I redescended without a regret, without an apprehension. Already the cook was displacing Dostoyevsky in favor of a white table-cloth and cutlery.
Arnold Bennett
FROM THE LOG OF THE VELSA
1914
FROM THE LOG OF THE VELSA
PART I HOLLAND
CHAPTER I—VOYAGING ON THE CANALS
CHAPTER II—DUTCH LEISURE
CHAPTER III—DUTCH WORK
CHAPTER IV—THE ZUYDER ZEE
CHAPTER V—SOME TOWNS
CHAPTER VI—MUSEUMS
PART II—THE BALTIC
CHAPTER VII—THE YACHT I LOST
CHAPTER VIII—BALTIC COMMUNITIES
CHAPTER IX—A day’s SAIL
PART III COPENHAGEN
CHAPTER X—THE DANISH CAPITAL
CHAPTER XI—CAFÉS AND RESTAURANTS
CHAPTER XII—ARISTOCRACY AND ART
CHAPTER XIII—THE RETURN
PART IV—ON THE FRENCH AND FLEMISH COAST
CHAPTER XIV—FOLKESTONE TO BOULOGNE
CHAPTER XV—TO BELGIUM
CHAPTER XVI—BRUGES
PART V—EAST ANGLIAN ESTUARIES
CHAPTER XVII EAST ANGLIA
CHAPTER XVIII—IN SUFFOLK
CHAPTER XIX—THE INCOMPARABLE BLACKWATER