19 August 2010

PAASSSTAAAA!

PART ONE
So we all know how terribly suck monkeys the journey to Italy was. Once we arrived though, things began to pick up.

I have made a habit of having at least two gelati a day. They're just too good. The fruit flavours are definitely better - much more refreshing. There's a place in Rome with seventy flavours on offer, and I'm indecisive anyway. They even have a watermelon flavour that tastes like the actual fruit, not that weird flavouring! In Florence, a scoop cost €1!
So, Venice - Busy during day, practically dead at night. Expensive. Small streets. Packed. Sunsets were gorgeous. Golden light. Probably nicer with more money and a special someone.



Verona - When I saw you in Verona... Six Euros on the train from Venice. Hot. Asked for bus tickets to the city centre in Italian. Was understood. Saw amphitheatre. Hot.


Florence - Loud snorer in hostel room. Almost comical except at 2am. Saw Florence in a day. Counted 17 churches. Lots of icecream was eaten. Florence might be wasted on me, because I don't care hugely for art. Besides, there's a copy of David in a square.



Beggars - Everywhere. Often with dogs. But thee dogs look really healthy. You'd think if you were really poor, your dog would be too. They are expensive animals. I suppose you could always be like that Tongan guy who ate his.

Besides, where's my money? I'm poor, don't speak the language, young, and in a foreign country with no income. If I sat on the side of the road with a paper cup, would you give me money? It's a big scam anyway. I refused to give a woman 1/4 of my €5e pizza, and as she walked away, I saw new Nikes under her shawl.
Sod off.

It's illegal in Italy to give them stuff. We saw a pamphlet on a train about thievery and on of the traps is "telling sad stories in expectation of money". I wrote this on a train to Naples, and a woman just came up to me with a piece of paper which says how her daughter is sick n a hospital in Rome with glaucoma. Why are you on a train to Naples if your daughter is sick in Rome? At least use some logic.

Pisa - Saw the leaning tower. I didn't expect it to be surrounded by so much other stuff. There's a cemetery, mausoleum, basilica and a baptistery. And all the idiots posing for photos i which thy hold up the tower. I wanted to run around and high-five them all, but I thought of it too late.

Rome - Mitfahr to Rome cost €10 each. Just caught the last metro. Hostel was rugged - no locks on the doors to the rooms, four showers for 27 people (2 with hot water), and a sleazy receptionist. Free net, and close to the Vatican. On our last night there, we shared our room with a bunch of girls from Manchester, who all said "crumbs" for me.
I regret not sticking with Italian at uni; it sure is a nice language.


You've heard what I think of the Vatican already on Facebook, more so of what Emily thinks (or doesn't, but will fight to the end for), so I won't go on about that here. Though I do wonder if Egyptian museums have anything in them - all their treasures are in the Vatican or the British museums.

We did Rome in a day - Colosseum, Palatine Hill, Roman Forum, Arch of Constantine, Pantheon (which is now a Christian monument), Trevi Fountain (which was massive) and much more. Naturally I ate some gelato (berry and plum) and pulled faces on the Spanish Steps.



5 comments:

  1. Ups and downs eh? This is quicker than fb with dodgy net, so I'll say it now: good night and good luck.

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  2. 1) There are beggers who will mutilate themselves or their children in order to pull more money, I've heard. Yeah.

    2) You and I should go to Verona the bar when we next meet up in Auckland, just for the hell of it.

    3) No doubt Egyptian museums lack the proper facilities to care for the artefacts, or are in areas too much at risk from violence and destruction...heh. The usual British Museum lines :P

    4) I WANT TO GO BACK TO ITALY! Hope you had a good time. I wish I could remember more of the specific locations from Assassin's Creed to ask you about ^_^

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  3. What can I say? I'm pathologically driven to see things from both sides. To my mind, if you think the answer is obvious, you're probably wrong.

    @Liz, yeah I think that scene in Slumdog Millionaire with the blinding is pretty accurate. It's disgusting. The whole cycle of dependence thing is very depressing in all its forms. (And then there are just outright scams of course.)

    So did you actually like Italy??? Were you inspired by the amphitheaters and whatnots? Or was it ho-hum? Scotland next? I love Scotland. Have a deep-fried Mars Bar for me.

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  4. Egypt lacks a lot of its original antiques because they were plundered and sold through the black market in the late 18oos and early 1900s, along with many others around the mediterain and/or taken by the archeologists who unearthed them (most often these archeologists were either british or german) The government is currently and has been for decades in disputes with other governments such as France and Germany to recover these lost artefacts. However due to their original acquirement the countries that possess them have no obligation to return them, they belong to them. Most famously this is the case of a set of ancient egyptian fresco fragments that are currently housed in the Louvre in Paris as well as Nerfertiti's bust held in Germany.

    Another perfect example are the Elgin Marbles (named after the British guy who stole them/was given permission to acquire them in the early 1900s) taken from Greece and now housed in the British museum after the British government bought them off him.

    yips...thats about it. Egypt is actually fully capable of looking after them.

    Kylie

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  5. http://www.elginism.com/20100220/2744/

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