Strokestown Park and Museum
Don drove me to get the 7:35 am train in Dublin's Heuston station in a mad hurry.
Mary met me at the train station in Roscommon on Friday as planned. Such nice trains! It took about an hour and a half and only cost 13 Euro and that was for the flexible ticket. I didn't realize I had an assigned seat so I got comfortable, connected my tablet to charge it and then had to move. But there were plenty of seats and the countryside landscape of sheep and green was so pretty, I couldn't read.
After breakfast at Gleesons in Roscommon
and buying tomatoes at the CSA in the town plaza, we went on a tour in Strokestown of the garden, house and National Famine Museum.
The house was about the rich people who lived there, their servants, their skiing trips, the drawing room (did you know drawing rooms were not for artistic endeavors such as drawing but for WITHDRAWING for privacy). I must confess that I was doing a Toastmaster function of counting our young guide's use of "actually" (about one every sentence) and didn't get much out of the tour; I asked Mary afterwards about the connection between the Famine and the aristocrats.
Family skiingPoor servants who had to lug huge pots full of food
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Wow, that is so intense. And what dissonance between the 'elegant' surroundings and the suffering that made it possible. I think we need to bring back drawing rooms but make them "actually" for artistic drawing.
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