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| Temple Bar area & my first Pub Crawl |
Dublin. A city I had heard much about in literature, but was
way different than I expected. For some reason, in my mind, I had a mental
picture of a sprawling, quaint town---and in reality it’s an urban metropolis
with an interesting mixture between the ancient and the modern.
It took 6 girlfriends and myself 4 hours by train and bus to
reach the city and once we arrived it took us quite some time to reach our
hostel, because there are NO street signs in Dublin. Or if there are, they are
very well hidden. Also, the roads never follow a pattern or grid like the
United States, but rather the old trails of the Vikings. That explains a lot J
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| Paying homage due from English majors everywhere |
My first hostel experience was an interesting one. I was placed in a room separate from my
friends and it was filled with French people who wouldn’t talk with me—slightly
awkward. It was a beautiful
sprawling stone building with four floors and room after room of dorm
beds. We met some nice Irish and
Italian people, but overall it felt like an orphanage. Yuck
We (of course) had to do a pub-crawl, and so we met up with
about 60 other backpackers and hit three pubs and a dance club in the Temple
Bar area! It was chaos! I recommend going with a smaller group if at all
possible. My favorite pub one was that played reggae music with a band called
the Barley Mob.
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Had to do it
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The majority of the rest of our time there was spent
sightseeing and learning about the city’s turbulent history. The Irish rebellions against the
English were key in all the places we saw and it was fascinating because I had
learned about the time and people through Yeats, Joyce etc., and now I have
images and experience to match with the things I read and study! Definitely a
cultural highlight. I also visited the Dublin Writer’s Museum to make my
English professors proud of me…ok…and I guess I liked it too! We went to the Guinness factory and my favorite part was the gorgeous 360-degree view of Dublin from the top floor. However, overall it was one of my least favorite activities because it was so crowded and slightly boring learning about the brewing process. I did have a sample there though
J
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| Christ Church Cathedral |
The absolute BEST experience of the whole city was going to
the Chester Beatty Library and seeing all the ancient religious documents. I had one of the strongest spiritual
moments of my life when I saw the portion of the oldest known book of
Romans. I tried to stop the tears
when it hit me that my Bible is based on true documents written thousands of
years ago, but they just kept coming. I will never forget that moment.
Other highlights were: Stephen’s Green Park (SO beautiful),
Christ Church Cathedral, Kilmainham Gaol, the General Post Office, Dublin
Castle, The National Museum of Archaeology, walking along O’Connell street,
eating out and so many other things!
that trip sounds amazing! Thanks for keeping us updated :)
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