Rodemell, East Sussex, England
Takes a lot of time to make walls tumble,
Stone by stone I'd make them crumble for you.
After visiting her house, we trotted down a lovely country path to the rather dreary River Ouse. It was rather fitting that it was so depressing, as the River Ouse is where Virginia Woolf committed suicide in March of 1941. It was a rather odd place to visit. She put on her overcoat and filled its pockets with stones, then walked into the River Ouse and drowned herself. It was a rather odd place to take us for a field trip, really really the weirdest field trip I have ever been on actually. Besides the river though, it was also the best field trip I have ever been on.Stone by stone I'd make them crumble for you.
After that uplifting trip to the riverside, we hopped back aboard the train, and traveled to the next town over, the metropolitan city of Lewes, which was still tiny but had a great enough population to support a pub. Lewis was also incidentally once the home of Anne of Cleaves, my favorite of all Henry VIII's wife because A) her portrait was very beautiful, but when Henry first met her he was apparently was underwhelmed by her beauty for her merely said, "I like her not!" and asked for a divorce. And B) because in the face of this rejection she saw an opportunity, and quite gracefully accepted the divorce, Henry was so happy that instead of chopping off her head as was his habit, her gave her a ton of money, a huge country manor, and appointed her as The King's Beloved Sister. The German princess was apparently the happiest and most long lived of all his wives. We went to the first pub we found, but it never served food. So we turned tail and went to the next one, which had JUST stopped serving food, which was weird, because it was only like 6 o'clock, and it seemed a little early for the drunkards to be coming out, but apparently I was wrong. We dragged our tired hungry bodies to one last pub, which was very crowded but still serving food. They said they didn't have a place to seat us all and I quickly insisted we didn't need to sit together, Emily went as far as to tell the waitress she was fine sitting with strangers as long as it meant she could it. They found seats for us all, and Patricia bought us all food. Emily and I ripped into our burgers and chips like starved lions pounce on a wounded zebra. I think it tasted good, although I ate so fast I honestly couldn't tell you. After eating, Emily and I began to get very tired, and decided we should get to the train station before the next train left, in fifteen minutes. It had been a very long walk, so we sprinted there. We got there and discovered the train left in twenty-five minutes, not fifteen. We sprinted on a very full stomach for nothing. . . our classmates definitely thought we were idiots. But that's okay. We got on the train, and I passed out, and slept all the way to London, until Joel shined the flash from his camera in my eyes and woke me up. Jerk.
All in all, it was an incredible day, filled with adventure and fun. It was also Joel's birthday. To bad for him when we got back a little after 8, no one wanted to anything with him anymore. :) It was definitely a well deserved bedtime.
3 comments:
Ha ha, very nice post, darling sister. I recognized almost all of the songs. I think there was only 1 I didn't know. I hope you're having a blast! Love you and miss you lots!
Impressive! I'm actually quite curious as to which song you didn't know...
I think I was able to get most of the songs too...spinning wildly out of control is right, though!! Looks like a fun place though...places like that were always my favorite to wander through in Ireland. = ) Smiles, and miss you!
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