The Station
The Station stands at the southern approach to the town, a handsome building of brick and glass whose iron-and-glass canopy catches the morning light and turns it gold. Trains come and go at intervals throughout the day. Each one brings new arrivals, each one carries departures, and the platform between them is always briefly full of greetings and farewells.
The station café — smaller and plainer than the one in the Square — serves good tea and hot soup to travellers waiting on cold days. The timetable board, hand-lettered and repainted each season, is a work of quiet art that the stationmaster has maintained with pride for many years.
All Journeys Begin Here
For those arriving in the Square for the first time, the station is their introduction to the town — the first smell of warm bread from the bakery carried on the wind across the platform, the first sound of the church bell, the first glimpse of the Hotel's pale façade at the end of the main street. The walk from the station to the Square takes about ten minutes, and most people stop twice along the way.