I arrived by bus and, instead of lugging my heavy and cumbersome duffel bag all over the city like I did in
Day One.
I left the hostel and traveled down
However, the big draw for me (and, I suppose, most tourists) was the Book of Kells. This is an 8th-century “illuminated Bible” – an incredibly lavishly illustrated copy of the New Testament. It was hand-scribed and -painted on vellum (de-furred and stretched animal hide) using natural pigments bound with egg white. I’m not sure what the proportion of each is, but the pages are divided into two categories: pages that are text-based, with occasional important words and letters enlarged and visually embellished; and pages that are entirely composed of unbelievably detailed illustrations of – for example – the crucifixion, saints, scribes, saints’ symbols, Celtic knotwork, and just…indescribable stuff. Before you reach the Book itself, you go through an exhibit talking about the history of the Book and others like it, the processes of scribing and illustrating and bookbinding, the meanings of certain illustrations, etc. Interesting enough in its own right. The Book of Kells is kept under glass in two “pieces.” Since the original binding has been lost, there is no problem with dividing the pages for easier viewing. However, in the interest (I assume) of prolonging the artifact’s life, only four pages are exposed at a time, and they are “turned” to show a new set of pages once every three months. At all times, I believe, there are two pages of illustrations, two pages of text. It’s unbelievable to see what these scribes and illustrators did without the aid of magnifying tools – or, indeed, archival-quality art supplies. It looks like it was painted yesterday! The paint is still glossy! It’s a very cool thing to see.
After this, you are led to the Old Library of Trinity College, which is a very long and beautifully-built room that houses thousands upon thousands of manuscripts from the past few centuries. Apparently, the Library has the legal right to claim one free copy of each new book published in
Anyway, despite the length of this description, it was only a little after lunchtime at this point! Later, I wandered around St. Stephen’s Green –
Day Two.
On this day, I had a tough decision to make. I knew the National Museum of History and Archaeology was open, and I also really wanted to tour the Old Jameson Distillery. My final decision was that, since museums always close early (5 PM!), I would check out the Jameson tour early, get lunch, then spend the afternoon in the museum.
…Do you see my mistake yet? You will.
The Old Jameson Distillery is so called because Jameson is no longer made there; production has been moved to somewhere in
You’ve almost got it figured out, don’t you?
Everyone gets a free drink at the end of the tour. However, in my case, it turns out that at the beginning of the tour I’d volunteered for the whiskey-tasting experience! How could I refuse such a tantalizing possibility? After everyone but us eight volunteers had gotten their drinks, we were seated at a long table in front of all the non-volunteers. Each of us had a tray in front of us with three half-shots mixed with water (to release the flavors, of course): one Jameson, one unidentified Scotch whisky, and one unidentified American whiskey. As the rest of the tour watched, the guide led us through the process of smelling the “nose” of each whiskey, then sipping them, describing the scents and flavors we should be noticing for each one and the reasoning behind it. Quite interesting, as well as tasty! We were later informed that the Scotch was Johnnie Walker 12-year-old Black Label (not too shabby) and the American whiskey was, of course, Jack Daniels. Each of us volunteers got a silly little diploma declaring us “official Irish whiskey tasters”.
Then we got our promised free drinks. Yes, in addition to the ones we’d sampled. Bringing me to a total of roughly 2.5 shots of whiskey/whisky in a period of fifteen or twenty minutes. This is how I came to be, at roughly 11:45 AM, walking the streets of Dublin in a state of drunkenness that I usually reserve for after midnight in the comfort of my own (or a friend’s) home. Yay
After I’d had lunch and sobered up a bit, I headed out to the
The “treasury” room had an awful lot of penannular brooches, which has successfully landed them on my list of things to make or purchase. I think it’d go great with a kilt, you see. Basically how they work is this: The brooch is a ring with a small open space, and opposite the open space is a pin that can move freely along the ring. You stick the pin through your cloak or whatever, then you slide the exposed tip of the pin through the open space on the ring, and twist it so that the pin is resting on the ring. At this point the fabric of your cloak can’t slip out. God, I explained that terribly, didn’t I? Here, this will help you understand:
http://www.runesmith.co.uk/runepens/runepens.htm
Thanks, Google!
Ah heck, let’s just post this now since I’ve got it written. So, one more
The internet here at the hostel is pretty slow, so you won’t get photos of

Like Mother, Like Son. She got the same Jameson buzz and cheesy diploma. That was the day that she asked when the "train" would arrive... referring to our garish double-decker tour bus. DAD
ReplyDeleteDaddy and his crazy stories....what a card.
ReplyDeletemom