As I look back on Fliff Week and ahead to Hell Week (every semester has one—that week where you have tests and presentations and quizzes all the time, for some reason all at once), I am quite pleased. I feel like I haven’t been to school in weeks, and between Sicily-Trip and fall break, I haven’t! Fall really has come to
I was really excited to see the amphitheatre, though, and the general layout of the city, as well as some of the temple bases. Plus, it’s always cool to share ancient stuff with your folks. ^_^
A view down the cliffs from the bus window
Dad in Ravello, stowing the camera
Lunch in Ravello overlooking Amalfi
The train ride back to Naples to get on the train back to Rome
Our trip back to
The room was equally above expectation, with our fairly new bunk beds and each having our own locker. Linda had arrived at the hostel about an hour before us, and Brooke appeared a little while after. She’d been in
It was just after going outside to walk around with Brooke that I realized the
There are sculptures everywhere, and fountains. The streets are wide and clean, and the people are all really friendly. There is art everywhere, and no graffiti. And, in the way that there is the occasional smell of something unpleasant.. like trash or pee or something in
You know. Random street. Actually that thing is the Staatsoper. And that's Bert.
But this really is a random street (Greg and Brooke included).
Brooke’s friend Bert was a lifesaver. He had a lot of great ideas about things I’d never even heard about. We saw the opera Elektra at the Staatsoper for two Euro on Friday night, which I’d heard of doing, but he led us. We also climbed to the top of St. Stefansdom during Friday afternoon, and looked around some other churches (a baroque and a gothic). We walked around a lot, and Greg dropped 150 euro on a book he’d been looking for that he happened to see in a store window (an anthology of Greek poetry). Before the opera, we had dinner, and I had the Wiener schnitzel, which is really like the tastiest fried pork chop ever, and sauerkraut, which was a lot better than Vandy makes, and some really good beer.
The opera was really cool. We had spots behind the tallest dude ever, but the set was amazing, and the whole thing took place at the feet of this colossal statue whose boot was on the world, I think Agamemnon (oh, btw, Elektra is based on a story from ancient
Saturday was rainy and really cold, so Linda, Greg, and I spent the morning in the art history museum, which was really cool and housed the Gemma Augustea which is, I didn’t know, the size of a plate basically. I learned about it in my class last year and had no idea it was in
You can see better pictures of this in my art history books.
That afternoon, it cleared up some, and we went to the
After that, Bert took us to a really cool place on the outskirts of town opposite the cemetery, the name of which I can’t remember.. but it’s a place where you go to try the new wine, and they are only open in certain seasons. We met our first non-English speaker, and sat in the fully wooden lodge feeling very content and very German with our light and tasty new white wine.
We tried to catch a concert in similar fashion to the opera on Saturday night after Brooke and Linda left to catch planes and trains, but it was sold out by the time we got there. Bert suggested we go look around the theatre because it has really nice paintings on the walls and ceilings, and there was a play going on so we could get in the front door. The people there told us to get upstairs (where the paintings were?) we had to buy a ticket for 1.50 euro, so we did, and whenever we showed the official people the ticket they gave us, they ushered us along until we were directed right into the top tier of the inside of the theatre.
Where Romeo and Juliet was taking place just below in German. On closer inspection, we had been sold standing-room tickets to the show and let in late. Whatever? We sat down and partook of the craziest version of R&J I ever have seen. I was okay with Juliet’s twin wandering around (her soul? I am not sure.. I thought she was a narrator at first) but when the foam-rubber body parts cascaded from the ceiling near the end, I was totally confused. It was pretty awesome, though.
We only had a few minutes to find the paintings, but we did see a few before the theatre people shut down the place on us. Greg and I returned to the hostel, where our roommates were decidedly less polite (and some of them less clothed) than the night before. We grabbed our free drinks in the basement bar and then I played in the pillow pit until I was ready to crash.
Our travel morning was also pleasant. Things went really smoothly and the flight attendant was the nicest dude ever. We caught the right buses right on time in
I’m going to have a lot of work to do this week, but I’m really glad that my break was such a wonderful success! I went from warm south to cold north, where people were swimming in the
4 comments:
Good stuff Emily. I loved following along on your travels for "Fliff week", and then seeing Mom and Dad to boot. It was neat to hear about Mom's favorite spots by phone this weekend, then seeing pictures (via your blog) to go along with her reflections.
Auntie Clara
awww, Emily, I miss you so much! and your family, too, strangely enough... anyway, I'm really glad you're getting to see so much while you're over there! We will definately have to hang out for ... how about a few days over Christmas so I can hear /all/ your stories!!! :D Love you, girl!
~Jenni~
would have loved to see that romeo and juliet rendition...sounds pretty nutty!
Your legs have a heart?? Love the blog, Em, it reminds me what it's like to be young and beautiful!!
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