There was another tourist/pilgrim waiting in front of tourist information. I talked to him for a moment and found that he was German. I'll call him Guido.
The office opened and we went inside to get our credential stamped and to find out how to get to the pilgrim shelter. While we were busy with this, the German couple I had met earlier walked in as well. They, too, wanted to get their credentials stamped, but they did not intend on spending the night. Guido told them what a beautiful place this would be to stay, but they said they are not on the road primarily for staying in beautiful places.
This was my introduction to Guido. It turned out that he was unemployed, but that he somehow still managed to spend most of his time vacationing in various places. He had done the Camino de Santiago several times, along several trails, but he seemed very relaxed about it all, taking the bus when he didn't feel like walking, or staying several days in one place if he liked it particularly. The Camino de Santiago is becoming clogged up with people like him.
The shelter here in Comillas did look a little more attractive than many of the previous ones. There were several rooms, and kitchen and laundry facilities, to some extent. The two French sisters were there again. I took a nap and when I woke up, Lone and Anabel and Matthieu had arrived as well. It seemed sort of funny the way we kept finding each other. Anabel and Lone told me they had had to stay at a sort of pension in Santillana del Mar, which ended up costing them significantly more than they had hoped to spend. I was glad to hear that, after having spent the night behind a gas station getting barked at by dogs and yelled at by neighbors and crawled on by slugs.
I went back into town to locate the library. It was right next to the tourist information bureau. There was a sort of patio there and some benches, and a lot of people sitting around and children playing. This was one of the things that surprised me about Spain: how much time people spent outdoors socializing.
In the library I needed to wait for some time before the computer was free. I found a book of Garcia Lorca's poetry which brought back memories of high school Spanish Literature class. I also found some works of St. John of the Cross. The depth of his work always overwhelms me. These intimate encounters with God seem to me so overpowering, so dangerous and frightening, and yet in these poems it is presented as something so sweet, so sought after. It seems bold and somewhat innocent and somewhat unnatural and yet so natural as well, to read his words...