Forgive
me followers, its been too many days since my last Blog post. I think
I've just passed the halfway mark of my trip which is hard for me to
conceive of. The days fly by and I keep trying to keep track of them
but the pictures are my best recourse. My flat has become home and
sometimes when I wake up I almost forget that I'm in a different
country. Sadly everything I'm doing here has taken a heavy toll on my
online classes. Apparently my Latin is improving though. I was trying
to think of what my favorite part of the trip so far has been. I
can't find one specifically but here are some of them.
Campo
de Fiori is kind of the Pearl Street of Rome. Its where everyone goes
to hang out and go to the bars. Theres a big fountain in the middle
where everyone sits. Its loud and crazy and fun, not to mention
everyone here is gorgeous. We sat on the fountain drinking wine
and nerding out on Latin until late into the night with the tinkling
of water in the background.
We
went walking on the Via Appia a few days ago. That road is about 2300
years old. Its a bit out of town and much of the stones have been
replaced but some of older ones are still there. Its beautiful
out in the countryside, walking down the old stones, the road lined
by trees. We sat at end of the road wrote stories of our trips to
Rome, in Latin of course.
Sometimes
you just have to take off and get lost to get to know a city. I
jumped on the metro and got off after a little, no idea where I was.
Turns out I was right next to the Italian International Library. I
walked in the big austere front and got a cappuccino. Thats another
thing about Italy. You just kinda get caps or espressos all the time.
Its totally normal to have three or four a day. Everyone does it. So
I get a cap and some how figure out how to get a library card. They
don't mess around with their books there. You have to leave you're
bags locked up outside and you need photo identification to get a
library card. I walked in to the cool, de-humidified, filtered air
and some how managed to walk right up to the shelf that held Virgil's
Aeneid. Speaking of Virgil....
We
went to Napoli for the weekend and stayed in 'Virgil's' villa outside
of town. There was an amphitheater being excavated right outside. But
when we first got to Napoli we went straight to Vesuvius and climbed
to the top. This is not as easy as it sounds. Its basically straight
up and there is no shade. They must make a killing selling water. You
can see inside the volcano and out over the city which is hazy from
pollution. We read Virgil's letter about the eruption which preserved
Pompeii. He saw it happen and 2000 years later I read his description
standing on the mountain that it came from. Yea. We walked back down
to the bus and headed back to the villa where they made us all dinner
which was amazingly delicious. I've never had tomatoes like that.
Then a few of us got bottles of local wine and walked down to the
amphitheater to sit under the stars and share them. The next day we
woke up early and drove to Pompeii. Oh, thats another thing I've
learned on this trip. How to sleep basically anywhere; on the bus, on
the train, face down on a table, siting on a bench..... I think this
is a good thing. I think. We walked down ancient roads into ancient
houses with the ancient paint still on the walls. A whole city frozen
in time. Its really amazing, theres no way to describe it. The metal
grates are still visible in the windows in some places. You can see
the 2ooo year old paint brush strokes in the paint on the walls. Oh,
did I mention that we spoke nothing but Latin inside the walls? No?
Well we swore an oath to use only Latin to get our ideas across for
the entire time we were in Pompeii. Thats immersion for you. We left
the city and went to cave of the Sybil. Exhausted we finally made it
back to the villa and had another amazing dinner. I bounced between
the amphitheater and the stone pingpong table in the back yard for
the rest of the evening and collected a hefty assortment of mosquito
bites. The next morning on Sunday we drove to Virgil's tomb and
recited some of his work inside. That was probably one of the best
parts of the whole trip for me. It brought tears to my eyes. We went
to the museum after and I got to see the mosaic with Alexander the
Great and Darius in it. Then we walked through the middle of Napoli
to a pizzeria and ate lunch. I won't even try to describe the pizza
to you. It wont do it justice and might actually be a sin. Then we
walked in the city more and met our bus to take us to the train
station to go back to Roma. It was about 38 in Napoli and humid. In
Roma it was 40. Thats about 104 for those of you who don't want to do
the conversion. What happened was this. We took the 4:30 train which
should have been a 2 hour and 15 minute train ride. When we left
Napoli all the seats were taken. Between the next two stops all the
standing room was taken. You see the Euro cup final game between
Spain and Italy started at 8:45 and everyone wanted to get back to
Rome in time for the game. So every time the train stopped we spent
about 15 minutes trying to either squeeze more people on the train or
convince them they weren't getting on. The air conditioning went out
about half way through. 3 and half hours later, when we finally
pulled up to Termini in Rome, the people who were trying to get on
the train to take it back to Napoli were flattened by the outpouring
of sweat soaked exhausted people clambering out of the train. We
finally made it home and then Italy lost the game. It was so sad. And
now I have to go to class. More soon I hope.
Caps? Don't dare use your disgusting American slang around my pure Italian pieces of perfection. I am pretty jealous that you went to Naples and Vesuvius. That's something I wanted to do but never did when I was there. That sounds wonderful. By the way, it's an unwritten rule that you stop getting cappucci after 10:30ish.
RispondiEliminaHere is a (somewhat) easier method of doing the Celsius to Fahrenheit conversion:
C = temperature in Celsius
F (temperature in Fahrenheit) = C(2-.2) + 32. What this means is say you have a temperature of 30 degrees. You multiply that by 2 to get 60. Then you subtract 1/10th of that to get 54. Then you add 32, and you get the magic answer of 86.