2 Route 1. ZEE-BRUGGE. From London the afternoon train from Charing Cross, the night train from Charing Cross and Cannon Street (on Frid. also from Victoria); at Brussels all the trains run to and from the Station du Nord. — Luggage is examined at Ostend. From Ostenp To Brussets, 78 M., railway in 11/2-41/, hrs. (fares 41 fr. 80c., 8 fr., 4 fr. 75c.); To Bruczs, 14 M., in 20-26 min. (fares 2 fr. 20, 1 fr. 50, 90 c.); To Guenr, 42 M., in 1-11/, hr. (fares 4 fr. 40, 2 fr.60c.). The through-trains in connection with the Dover steamers usually stop neither at Bruges nor at Ghent; some halt at Gand-St-Pierre (see below and p. 53), where passengers for Ghent change carriages. Travellers proceeding direct to Antwerp through the Waesland (p. 88) should book to Bruges only, and there take a fresh ticket vid Ghent (see p. 49 and R. 9). If a through-ticket from Ostend to Antwerp be taken, the traveller is conveyed by the longer route via Malines. Ostend, see p. 10, — The express-trains in connection with the Dover steamboats start from the quay, the ordinary trains from the station in the town. The line crosses the canal diverging from the Bruges Canal to the S.W. and leading via Nieuport and Furnes to Dunkirk. 4!/. M. Oudenburg, with the ruins of a Benedictine abbey and an old church, lies to the right, in the midst of productive gardens which supply Ostend with fruit and vegetables. — 8 M. Jabbeke. 14 M. Bruges (see p. 23, and Map, p. 16) is the junction of the line for Paris vid Roeselare and Lille. From BRUGES TO BLANKENBERGHE, 81/2 M., railway in 18-27 min. (fares 1 fr. 50, 4 fr., 60 c.). The train skirts the N.W. side of Bruges, passes the Ostend Gate (p. 40; left), and calls at (13/, M.) Bruges-Nord, near the har- bour. — 5 M. Dudzeele (see below). Light railway to Heyst, see below. — 6 M. Zuyenkerke. — 8\/2 M. Blankenberghe, see p. 19. From Bruges ro Heysr, 11 M., railway in 39 min. (1 fr. 75, 1 fr. 15, 70 c.). —At (11/4 M.) Bruges-Nord (see above) we diverge from the Blanken- berghe line. — 5 M. Dudzeele, 1/2 M. to the E. of the other station (see above). — 7M. Lisseweghe, a flourishing town in the middle ages, is now only a village. The Church, a handsome structure of the 13th cent., in the transition style, formerly belonged to an abbey, and has been restored since 1898. At the end of the left aisle is a Visitation by J. van Oost the Elder. The truncated tower, although two-thirds of it only are com- pleted, is a very conspicuous object in the landscape. A huge barn (now a farm), with immense oaken beams, dating from 1280, is the solitary relic of the wealthy abbey of Ter Doest. — 8 M. Zee-Brugge is the new seaport of Bruges (comp. p. 25). Its large Outer Harbour communicates with a smaller inner basin at the beginning of the new Canal Maritime. This canal, which is 230 ft. wide and 26 ft. deep, allows sea-going vessels to reach (6 M.) Bruges, where another harbour has been made. The canal and harbour were designed by Coiseau and Cousin of Bruges and constructed in 1895-1907 at a cost of nearly 42 million francs. The crescent-shaped Mole, protecting the outer harbour from the N. W. wind, is 11/eM. long. It is mainly constructed of blocks of concrete and is provided with elevators, warehouses, and railway tracks. Steamers thence to Hull, in connection with express trains to and from Brussels, see p. 1. — 101/2 M. Heyst-Zcluses, at the locks of the drainage canals. — 14 M. Heyst, see p. 22. To Thowrout (Courtrai and Ypres), see p. 43. 18M. Oosteamp ; 22M. Beernem; 271/y M. Aeltre (steam-tram- way to Thielt and Eecloo, see p. 47); 29M. Bellem; 311/.M. Hans- beke; 331/ M. Landeghem; 371/, M. Tronchiennes (Flem. Drongen; steam-tramway to Ghent, p. 78). — 40 M. Gand-St-Pierre; pas- sengers for Ghent by the through-trains usually change carriages here.