day one on a desert­ed island

I’m sit­ting here with my desk pos­i­tive­ly cov­ered with the del­i­cate flat stones that make up the beach­es sur­round­ing Burgh Island. Why are they all so flat? It must have some­thing to do with the tidal move­ments. In any case, I could not resist putting (I thought) just a few in my pock­et. And also some sea glass that is almost as beau­ti­ful as the pieces we col­lect in Maine. But now I’m home, the pile is rather… immense. Some are des­tined for a trip across the pond to Iowa, for my moth­er in law who col­lects rocks. Seriously.

At any rate, stone gath­er­ing occu­pied our time on Mon­day until we felt the strong need of a nap, and a nice read on the bal­cony out­side our room. Then it was a bath, and get­ting dressed for din­ner, which is black tie there every evening (on Wednes­days there’s a dance, in case you like that kind of thing). It sim­ply isn’t fair. All men look stun­ning in black tie, but a woman has to make an effort. And I am just not the shop­ping kind, at least not for things I don’t wear every day. How­ev­er, I man­aged to squeeze into the same black skirt I wore last year to Glyn­de­bourne, and that had to do. Out on the ter­race out­side the din­ing room we suc­cumbed to a cock­tail of what turned out to be a stag­ger­ing­ly dis­gust­ing com­bi­na­tion of ingre­di­ents: the Burgh Island Breeze. And John had a Minti­ni. What ever made any­one, even in 1929, think that mint and vod­ka went togeth­er? Most odd. The canapes, how­ev­er, more than made up for the cock­tails: dates wrapped in pro­sciut­to, aspara­gus wrapped in puff pas­try, and the fat­test tem­pu­ra-bat­tered oys­ters in the world. Divine.

Onto din­ner, which was also love­ly, in the peri­od din­ing room com­plete with murals of danc­ing flap­pers: one of which is a por­trait of the own­er of the hotel, and her hus­band (we saw him lat­er the next day, every bit as dash­ing in gar­den­ing clothes as in a two-dimen­sion­al tuxe­do). We had the most sub­lime foie gras I think I have ever had, per­fect­ly sauteed, then lamb and fil­let steak with kumquat puree and Jerusalem artichokes.

To retire to our room with cof­fee, pep­per­mint tea and a nice neat Scotch (no more six-ingre­di­ent col­ored things, no sir) was relax­ation itself. The bed had been turned down, the lights lit, and alto­geth­er I was sur­prised not to feel the room sway with the waves, it was so much like being on a ship. Not that I ever have, but from what I’ve read! Radio 3 on the vin­tage radio (with sta­tions marked by their cities of ori­gin!), the cur­tains blow­ing in the sea breeze, the high tide splash­ing out­side. Real­ly won­der­ful. Day two beckoned…

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