晚安有什么特别含义在爱尔兰是什么含义

[转载]晚安篇《爱尔兰风笛&Song&of&the&Irish&Whistle》
英文名称:Song of the
Irish Whistle
别名:爱尔兰画眉
风笛是一种很特别的乐器,就像画眉鸟的嗓子。
中国的短笛声音与它如此相似,却表达着完全不同的音乐情感。
在风笛甜美的声音里,你会听见一丝隐约的沙哑和沧桑,
每一个尾音,会非常随意和放肆地留下一个回旋的音符,散漫慵懒,隐藏着纯朴和野性。
风笛倾诉着流浪和寂寞,流露出纯洁而洒脱的感情,那声音纯净得不似来自人间。
一张典型的爱尔兰风格的音乐碟,非常的忠于原味,
充分运用了爱尔兰的经典乐器:哨笛、风笛、小提琴、手风琴,竖琴、
同时混合了一些新纪元琴键、吉他的节奏和配合。
另有一凡新意,但是他的原汁原味的凯尔特情调在此碟中为主旋律,也是这张大碟为人所好的原因。
&&&&&&&&知名电影「铁达尼号」的配乐中,曾多次出现爱尔兰的哨笛声。
相信熟悉爱尔兰音乐的乐迷,对于哨笛这样古老的乐器,都一定不陌生,
因为它具有一种童真的清净与无邪,让人听得如痴如醉。这张唱片是以短小轻巧的哨笛为主轴,
而吉他则伴随着笛音,传递轻柔的背景,而长笛和竖笛也偶尔穿梭其中,
让原本就具有小男孩高音域的特色,呈现出一种音质清澈的魅力。
收录的每一首曲子正是爱尔兰充满神话的人文风貌。
其中以Women of
Ireland最具有风的悠远,
让我们更能感受到这首曲子所传达的爱尔兰女性神秘坚忍的特质。
透过哨笛诠释的曲子,总让人想起童年的美好回忆,有时更会激动地落泪.....。
&&&&&&聆听后将会钟爱一生的一张不可错过的专辑。
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[音乐如水]==安妮宝贝==摘自[网络]
&&。。。音乐是在瞬间流泻出来的。
在寂静的房间里。
还没来得及开空调。
但是那一个瞬间。那一个瞬间。
流水般的音乐突然把自己缠绕。
清凉空灵。是风笛高亢忧郁的旋律,带着透明的无孔不入的宛转。
虽然已经很熟悉这样的音色。
&&&&&&没有任何理由地深爱着爱尔兰的音乐。
那片神秘的土地似乎蕴藏着无尽的传说。天生的忧郁气质。
但是在一些奔放的舞曲里,却又不羁而烂漫。
它带给我的沉沦,象一场没有开始也没有结束的爱情。
  &&只有自己的想象。
是美丽的。也是孤独的。在陌生的人群里,我感觉自己的存在。
就好象在一个闷热的夏天夜晚,
与纯粹的音乐相对。
局促的生活虽然带来许多失望。
但是快乐的时光依然让我们感激。
【经典评论荟萃】
19:08:20 [删除]&[举报]
好久没有坐下来听听音乐了,对风笛既不陌生也不了解,总觉得它很古老很传统,让人想起苏格兰高地和威士忌、独立农舍.......天总是阴的,地是沉的。
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&&&&&&&&&&夕阳下追风筝的少年&&&&&&&&&&&&&&青春美好&&&&&&&&奔向未来
All About Ireland
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Galway City
Moher Cliff
旅行,是为去远方找回另一个自己
Dublin Zoo Halloween
This Sunday bring your little ghouls and goblins to our ‘Boo at the Zoo’ from 12 noon. There’ll be spooky fun aplenty with face-painting
爱上爱尔兰的200个理由
The Irish are a nation of emigrants. After a brief respite, we&re back to boats and planes as vehicles for careers and lives. But Dublin&s still a great place to live, regardless of how small it might seem or how long the dole queue is. In March 1984, InDublin magazine provided two hundred reasons for the city&s denizens not to leave its dreary streets and, after Brand New Retro brought it back to our attention, we felt like it might be a good idea to update for a new generation about to make a big decision.
1. Chipper chips
There is nothing in the world that can replicate the salivation, nostalgia and vinegar coughs that assault you when you smell that bag of chips.
2. Vincent Browne
There are no-nonsense, bullshit-filtering political interviewers, and then there&s Vincent Browne, scowling at Martin McGuinness from behind a pile of books and calling Dylan Haskins Declan intentionally on live TV.
3. Deli counters
Deli counters exist in other countries, but they do not sell entire greasy breakfasts in baguettes. Irish on-the-go cuisine meets the needs of the hungover populace.
4. Pints of Guinness
Wait for it. Watch it swirl around. Grow a moustache, so that when it&s finally settled, you can dip it into the creamy head, sip and then give your opinion on the pint in the specific establishment in which you&re sat. There is a difference, you insist.
5. The Iveagh Gardens
The only city centre park that seems to enforce some kind of nebulous door policy, the Iveagh Gardens are the other good thing the Guinness family gave to the city.
6. Temperate climate
It might be too wet all the time, but it&s never too hot or too cold, really. Your skin can&t take the sun anyway.
7. Your family
Your family live here and they will be really unhappy if you move far away.
8. Croke Park
This country has an 82,000 seat stadium devoted to a set of sports that your primary school teacher used to play at the highest level. Appreciate that.
9. David Norris
In 1992, homosexuality was illegal in this country. Now it&s not. David Norris, whether or not he enticed you to vote for him, is a rare sort of public figure.
10. Culchiedom
If you are from Dublin, you live your life around the tacit fact that you are superior to people from the country by birth. If you leave Ireland, no-one will care.
11. Burritos&
Okay, they have burritos everywhere, but they&re probably full of fancy stuff and complications. Stick to Boojum, Pablo Picante and Burritos & Blues.
12. Statues with derisory names
It&s difficult to imagine any piece of public art in Dublin that wouldn&t be mercilessly bullied by the citizens. If the Lady Liberty was here, it&d be called The Clown In The Crown.
13. Banter with the Garda&
It&s possible to get out of trouble for most minor crimes by simply acting as if you&re friends with the person who&s supposed to be charging you. Now head straight home lads alright?
14. James Joyce
They read Joyce in every corner of the world, but they lack the option to actually stroll around in the footsteps of the characters. Do it when it&s not Bloomsday so you&re not surrounded by 70 year olds cosplaying Buck Mulligan.
15. Vikings
Dublin was founded by angry Norsemen who needed somewhere to park their boats for the winter so they could rest up for another summer of stealing gold and burning monasteries. That&s way cooler than pilgrims.
16. Common hatred of Bono
Not only do people in other countries often consider Bono to be a talented, respectable superstar, they actually presume that you do too. But your fellow citizens know the truth.
17. Jedward
They might be lunatics, but they are our lunatics.
In Ireland, our team are proud, manly warriors staring the best in the world in the face with no shame. Elsewhere, they do not know what rugby is.
19. Alcoholism
You drink way too much, and there&s actually serious social stigma attached to that in other countries, on top of the negative stereotypes you&d be reinforcing.
20. Bodytonic
Whether it&s free pizza served from a double-decker bus or filling-loosening sub bass you&re looking for, Bodytonic is looking after your needs. The Shaw and the Twisted Pepper are the cool bars you&re trying to emigrate to hang out in.
21. The Golden Age Of Irish Music
It might be the recession or it might be the fact that every teenager in the country was bought an instrument during the Celtic Tiger. Either way, homegrown bands have stopped worrying about major label deals and started doing something special.
22. Watching live television while on Twitter
As a nation of begrudgers, there&s no better medium for us to unleash pithy remarks at a rate of three per minute without getting punched than Twitter, whether X-Factor or World Cup.
23. Conradh na Gaeilge
Genuine gaeilgeoir& d&chais do still exist, and they&re sitting in a dimly lit corner of the Conradh bar on Harcourt Street. Rumours of 8am table-dancing lock-ins unconfirmed.
24. Never far from green space
If you choose a direction and drive for twenty minutes, you&re likely to encounter livestock, regardless of where you are. Dublin is a good city for agoraphobes.
25. Salted butter
The disappointing, colourless slop that passes for butter in every other country in the world is a disgrace to bread.
26. A proper fry
There are occasions on which nothing else will do but exactly the type of fry-up your mother used to make. To go without proper rashers and sausages is to risk loss of sanity.
27. Asian karaoke
It&s now possible to make for Capel Street and Parnell Street to drink Korean beer and scream the words to Get Low in a small, private booth with your friends. Death to the karaoke MC.
28. Screen Cinema
Almost all of the legacy cinemas in Dublin are gone, but the Screen on Hawkins Street is still representing hard for the non-film school, anti-multiplex movie experience with throwback series and no attempt to bump you up to &premium& seats.
29. Dublin football team
It took a very long time, but we did indeed win the Sam Maguire last year. To turn your back on your countymen in their year of jubilation would be treason.
30. The idea of Coppers
It doesn&t matter that it&s actually a sardine tin full of creeps. Coppers is a word that connotes a novel worth of meaning about teachers, nurses and good Catholic marriage.31. The Docklands&
Representative of Tiger folly in some respects, the Square&s rapid red and green lights, the Theatre, and some really awesome cafes are still a huge improvement over burnt-out mattresses on Misery Hill.
32. Referring to politicians by their first name
You&ve never met Michael D. Higgins, despite his claims to have known your father, but that doesn&t mean you&re ever going to stop calling him Michael D.
With a big, often renewed stock of secondhand vinyl, old school consoles and games for machines that were obsolete before you were born, the Record and Games Emporium on Fade Street is a shop you never knew you needed. But you did.
34. Saying Paddy rather than Patty when referring to St. Patrick&s Day
Are you really going to allow them to insult the honour of our semi-historic Roman-Welsh patron saint by referring to him by a woman&s name?
35. No snakes
Paddy chased away the snakes that you might lie in longish grass on sunny days without risking death.
Free from the constraints of having to actually please a large audience, TG4 showed both The Wire and the OC first and have a good line in forgotten classic movies. Also, an endless supply of attractive female newsreaders.
The reason a sizeable portion of film aficionados haven&t abandoned DVD rentals, its staff are friendly, knowledgeable, and total movie geeks, and its Trash shelf is full of B-Movie gold.
38. Ranelagh Village
Only a ramble from the city centre, Ranelagh greedily has at least 4 outlets offering the best coffee in Dublin, and there&s no such thing as a bad restaurant along the stretch.
39. Fixx Coffeehouse/The Bald Barista
The former is as homely a caf& as you&ll find in one of the city&s busiest locations, while the latter affords you opportunities to look cultured to backpackers as you attempt to gain access to their Avalon House bunk-beds.
40. Joe Macken&s food empire
With Jo&Burger, Crackbird, Bear, and Skinflint all in his portfolio, Macken knows how to build a restaurant&s buzz and, more importantly, how to fill your tummy beyond healthy levels.
41. Asia Market
Drury Street&s pan-Asian super-shop is full of all kinds of mental vegetables, medicinal-strength Red Bull, and really sweet shop assistants.
42. The Flea Market
There&s a smorgasbord of really scary car boot sales around town, but if you&re weak of disposition Newmarket&s monthly flea is a serious trove of vintage, tat and treasure.
43. David O&Doherty
Every Dublin generation has a wit to be proud of, and DO&D is ours.
44. Chuggers
They can be the bane of your morning&s walk to work, but remember they&re doing Actually Good Work (and they&ll compliment you loads if you talk to them for five minutes).
45. Memorial Gardens in Islandbridge
The pseudo-classical ruins shouldn&t work, but there&s something affecting about the Memorial Gardens, and even if you&re not into the contemplative space, there&s always canoe-watching down by the river.
46. Phoenix Park
Walk your dog, go deer-spotting, play football or Frisbee, roll down the Pope&s Cross while shouting &such happiness I have never seen&, hang around the American embassy until men in sunglasses move you on. The possibilities are endless.
47. Salmon
There are now salmon in three rivers in Dublin, the Liffey, the Dodder and the Tolka. There are no salmon in any other capital city in the EU.
48. Rubberbandits
Horse Outside went viral in America too, but you get that they were laughing at us rather than with us, right?
49. The Church
Sin&ad O&Connor basically made a career out of complaining about the oppressiveness of the Roman Catholic Church. In 2011, she looked like a fool for harping on about it, because we&re finally free.
50. Polish things
The arrival of Polish people, with their good genes and Irish-compatible personalities, led to decent cheap beer and a whole shops worth of stuff that seem like they might be worth a try at least.
51. TV License Inspectors
The word on the street is that TV License inspectors can&t actually come into your house without being invited. Do with this information what you will.
52. National Leprechaun Museum
The only way to make leprechauns acceptable was to reclaim them from the Americans, which we have done by setting up a museum of folklore and fun on Jervis Street complete with a room full of giant furniture.
53. Jokes about Bebo
Hah! Funny picture! Put that on your Bebo, man.
54. St. Kevin&s Park
Sitting in behind Whelans on Wexford Street, there&s a little park around the ruins of St. Kevin&s Church. It&s full of gravestones and it&s quiet, so if you must write terrible poetry, there&s nowhere better.
55. Sound pigeons
Dublin&s pigeons are manageable in number and well-fed enough not to feel like it&s necessary to swarm you for the purposes of intimidating that sandwich out of your hand. They don&t even look that mangy.
56. Stephen&s Green on a sunny day
For centuries, tired city folk have taken to the grass in Stephen&s Green to rest and take in the warmth. There is no better feeling.
57. Trinity College
Forget about the Book of Kells. Turn left before the Dining Hall in Front Square for a tiny cemetery full of ghosts, or ask permission to see St. Patrick&s Well, Gaelic Ireland&s third holiest site, in the Provost&s Garden. Or just drink cans at the Pav.
58. Cheeky kids
If a child on a bike tells you they like your hair, that means that they think your hair looks stupid and that you are an idiot. The city&s children are amongst the world&s most sarcastic.
59. Flann O&Brien
One of the few Irish authors that didn&t just give up and move somewhere else, Flann would have been 100 this year if he&d been immortal. People are finally starting to notice that he&s one of the best writers ever.
60. Taxi driver conversations
Okay, these are usually terrible, but there is one taxi driver in Dublin genuinely mad at the bassist from Aslan for pretending to be psychobilly in Comet Records in the 80s. Ask about it in every taxi you&re in until you find him.
61. Tipping
Conveniently, tipping is at least nominally optional in pretty much every scenario in this country. That means that you can just decide not to do it.
62. Knowing the beggar&s pitch
&Excuse me, can I ask you something? I&m not a junkie or anything, I don&t even drink, I&m just a few euro short for the bus back to Carlow.& You&ve probably never even been to Carlow, mate.
63. Getting your news from the Metro Herald
Its news is simplified to the extent that it&s possible to digest it at 7.30am on a jammed public transport vehicle, and it always has funny animal pictures. It&s like the internet in a free newspaper.&64. Low risk of invasion
Historically, neither the Romans nor the Germans were bothered putting any real thought into invading us even as they tried to take over the entire world. Island living can come in handy.
65. Liveline
You can actually ring the national radio broadcaster and be put on air to ask the owner of the black Labrador in the playground in Termonfeckin to come collect him. Joe Duffy is the people&s champion.
66. The word &grand&
Whatever it is, it doesn&t need to be perfect. It just needs to be barely of sufficient quality to be fit for purpose. It&ll be grand.
67. No ironic sports jerseys
Chances are, if you see someone in Dublin wearing a jersey, they&re genuinely a fan. That dude in Williamsburg wearing a Larry Bird throwback Celtics jersey? Not so sure.
68. Ideology is distasteful
Unlike, say, continental Europe, where the political parties are obviously distinguishable by the fact that they actually just put the word &right& of &left& in their names, Irish people abhor ideology. There are bad sides to this, but it does mean we have no organised racist right.
69. Urinating on the street
Although it is technically illegal, everyone agrees that urinating on the street is in fact completely fine so long as you&re at least a little bit discreet. Ever tried it in New York? It&s not fine.
70. Lax door policies
Clubs actually want you to attend them, for the most part, so it doesn&t actually matter that you&re wearing a bin bag and a pair of sandals as long as you buy a few pints.
71. Moore Street
Though now also home to types of food and merchandise that were presumed imaginary in this part of the world until recently, Moore Street&s still vibrant as ever. Rumour has it the same woman has been selling fish there for 200 years.
72. Gaff Parties
The country&s arseways licensing laws may mean our nightlife pales by comparison of other European capitals, but that 9.55pm rush to the offo often inspires the most chaotic of housebound alternatives. Chances are half your mates will roll up by 5 a.m. without you having even invited them.
73. The girls are so pretty
Though apparently susceptible to fever, the women of Dublin are celebrated in the songs of old for their lovely visages. The men are probably handsome too.
74. Merrion Square mound
There&s a large, obviously man-made, rectangular mound in the park in Merrion Square. It turns out it covers a wartime bunker, which is better than our guess, pagan temple.
75. Wexford strawberries
The science behind it is still vague, but it&s observable fact that the best strawberries in the world are grown in Wexford and to be procured by the side of a motorway.
76. Packing
If you emigrated, you&d have to pack. You&d probably forget something.
Did you know the best coffee you&ll get in all of the world is available in the foyer of our foremost nightclub? Colin Harmon&s experiment in educating our Nescaf&-spoiled tastebuds is part of a coffee culture explosion that makes us seem way more cosmopolitan than we are.
78. St. Michan&s
Under a very old church in Smithfield lies a complex of burial vaults containing 12th century mummies, aristocratic grandees and other corpses of note. Also in the graveyard, allegedly, Emmet&s unmarked resting place.
79. Not that much knife crime
You don&t seem to hear that many stories of young lads stabbing people with no motive in Dublin, which is cool.
80. Why Go Bald sign Along with the video screen showing ads above Centra, the Why Go Bald sign on Dame Lane is part of Ireland&s Times Square, asking us all an important question nightly with its neon glow.
81. When the street pattern works
Looking down Capel Street towards City Hall or down Mount Street towards the Pepper Canister, it&s hard not to find Dublin beautiful, even in the rain.
82. Smell of hops from the Guinness factory
It might be owned by a faceless corporation now, but Guinness has been making its area of the city smell in a curious and unique way for 250 years.
83. The Abbey
It&s been a legend ever since Yeats& dad stood up and called Ireland a land of &plaster saints& during the Playboy of the Western World fracas, and though it&s less controversial now, it&s still important for more than being living history.
84. Charity Shop Mile
From the junction of Georges Street and Dame Street up to Portobello, there&s a plethora of shops full of old clothes, books and records. The price is right, even if the original owner is dead.
85. Wall & Keogh
Thanks to this tea-leaf apothecary, there&s a viable alternative to pub socializing. Try some mat& in this Portobello establishment and lose two hours of your life.
86. Natural History Museum
In some countries, museums of natural history have dinosaurs and dazzling audio-visual exhibits. Ours is a big hall full of faded taxidermy, but the pathos is irresistible.
87. Films filmed in Dublin
Glen Hansard getting his fiver robbed in Once, Wilson Pickett&s car stopping beside the band on the quays in The Commitments, the bus rolling through Finglas in Intermission. You&ve been to these places.
88. Pedestrianised areas
Once upon a time it was impossible to lollygag around the middle of Grafton Street without the risk of being run over by a car, but then they made it pedestrian only. Now you can move with your own pace and trajectory.
89. Ethical farming
The meat and dairy industries in Ireland, despite an apparent absence of any real public sentiment on the matter, operate to the high international standards of ethics, so you can feel better about your steak.
90. The Marys
For twenty-one years, from 1990 until 2011, Ireland&s head of state was a woman. That&s still pretty impressive by international standards, even if we fall down elsewhere.
91. The Dodder Rhino
The owners of the Dropping Well in Milltown deny any responsibility for the metal rhino statue that showed up in the Dodder beside their pub a few years ago, but he&s definitely there.
92. Howth Hill Few cities have their own little wilderness like this, punctuated by rope swings repaired a million times.
93. Blackberry picking
Eat more of them than you collect. Anywhere along the DART line usually has loads.
94. Dollymount beach Christmas swim
Jump in the sea with old people who&ve done it since forever. Then it&s free hot whiskey wrapped in your towel!
95. Dublin Bikes
The city swapped some advertising space for them, now there&s shrewd thinking.
96. Horses
The carriages at Stephen&s Green, youngfellas on those chariot things in the Liberties and that guy who still delivers coal on a cart.
97. Temple Bar
OK sure, it&s often teeming with tourists, but at least they&re all kept in one place&98. The streetlights on Merrion Square
The council has kept a living record of all the styles of streetlight in the city&s history around Merrion Square. Beautiful.
99. Chester Beatty Library
Sir Alfred &King of Copper& Chester Beatty&s collection of rare books and manuscripts is one of the finest in the world, and is open to the public in his library, located within the grounds of Dublin Castle.
100. Jambons
These are the savoury pastry mittens of cold winter nights, acting as handwarmers as you scurry along the streets. The perfect size for a wee munch between pubs, or on your way home, they can be found in literally every hot-food counter in Dublin. Best eaten when slightly inebriated.
101. Toasties in Grogan&s -
It would be too hard to know that this comfort of all comforts was not within walking distance. Paired with a creamy pint of Guinness, it&s the dinner of Kings, Queens and high-functioning alcoholics.
102. Banter with Auld Ones
Do older folk in other countries chat as easily to youngsters as they seem to do here? For example, during our snowy spell last year I slipped a bit on some ice, prompting a very old and toothless man nearby to trill &Don&t be fallin& for me, love!&
103. The Cop On Forcefield
No matter how hipstery we might get, there&ll always be someone on hand to bring us back down to reality. A genuinely useful form of begrudgery.
104. Canal cans
Not exactly wine on the banks of the Seine but it has its own charm.
105. The North-South divide
What other city can boast such a humorous divide by a mere cross of a river? From peaked caps worn at 45* angles to jager chugging rugby boys, you might just miss &em if you up sticks.
106. Father Ted
If you stay on our green shores you&ll never have to deal with that disappointing look of bewilderment when you reference cocaine cake.
107. Christmas Toy Show
There&s scarcely anything better for Yuletide cheer than donning your best geansai nollaig for this well established institution.
108. Packages Ih Cripps
Producing some our childhood favorite crisps in ways you would never experience anywhere else: Banshee Bones, Hot Lips and Monster Munch. Tayto and King still slay gourmet competition.
109. Club Rock Shandy and Red Lemonade
You&d never know you missed them until that faint pang returns and you realise you&re surrounded by european water bottles with varying levels of fizz in them.
110. The Nitelink
Probably one of the only night buses in the world where you can be united in a chant with every single passenger on the way home.
111. Pedestrian disregard for bicycles
Cycling is healthy and admirable from an environmental standpoint, but the constant risk of having your flank annihilated by a biker bombing down the European &cycle lane& you&re meandering in is no joke. Cyclists (resentfully) know their place here.
112. The Shamrock Rovers renaissance
After a dark period of being called &homeless bastards& at every away match, Rovers beat Partisan Belgrade and got to invite the mighty Tottenham Hotspur to their new home. It was a proud day for Ireland, and a proud day for Tallaght.
113. The chance to correct your vote in referendums
The government didn&t physically threaten you into actually reading the literature the first time, so it&s their fault you voted the wrong way. You deserve another chance.
114. National Museum
The Kildare Street arm of the National Museum contains a record of Ireland&s material culture from the stone age up till the Adventus Anglorum, featuring a dazzling array of gold objects.
115. National Gallery
Visit the building that Colm T&ib&n considers the most beautiful place in Dublin to view monumental eschatological works and Mass In A Connemara Cabin.
116. Mini-Galleries Abound
While our array of national and hugely-Arts-Council-subsidised galleries offer visitors a glance into Irish culture, the work of the little guys & spots like Monster Truck, Mother&s Tankstation, and Block T remind us on a monthly basis that artistic expression flows through our blood.
117. Glasnevin Cemetery
The final repose of 1.1 miliion Dubliners features the graves of everyone from Brendan Behan to de Valera and Collins to the blind bard of the Liberties himself, Zozimus.
118. Sheridans Cheesemongers
The French have a thousand types of cheese, but they never got around to inventing Cashel Blue or any of the other fine Irish cheeses stocked in this near-institution.
119. O&Connell Street statuary
From Charles Stewart Parnell wearing two overcoats to William Smith O&Brien, whose plinth calls him a traitor in English and a martyr in Irish, the centre of O&Connell Street is Ireland&s great kilometre of public art.
120. Fair City
It is in art that we truly discover ourselves and, in the trials and tribulations of the salty, less salty and obviously nouveau riche of Carrigstown, we find a mirror.
121. Rocque&s map
Sir John Rocque&s map of Dublin, drawn in 1756, illustrates the city rebuilt from its medieval roots, prepared to become the Second City of the Empire. Have fun spotting streets that are no longer there.
122. Dalkey Island
With habitation going from the Stone Age through hermit monks to medieval markets, Vikings, a Martello tower and eventually a herd of wild goats, Dalkey Island&s full of history and an excuse for a boat trip.
123. Donnybrook Fair
The term &donnybrook& in the English language refers to &a scene of uproar and disorder&, because of the amount of fights that broke out at the market there in olden times. Starting rows in the modern artisan supermarket is not advisable though.&124. BYOB gigs
The kind of people in bands are the kind of people who probably can&t bear the financial burden of pub-price pints every time they play, so places like The Joinery in Stoneybatter stepped up to provide a space for cheap can-drinking and head-bopping.
125. Arthur&s Day
We know it&s a marketing scam, but it is an admittedly ingenious one, and it leads to a day of the year where every pub in the city is filled with enthusiastic people
126. People&s houses on the Luas Green Line
Anybody with any sense wanted them to build an underground, because undergrounds are cool, but they didn&t. On the plus side, though, our metropolitan transit lets us see into people&s gardens and kitchen windows.
127. Dublin Mountains
Watch the mountains in the distance on a clear day as you come southbound into town or, even better, watch the city (or the sea) from Three Rock in the mountains.
128. Grafton Street before Christmas
It&s full of countryfolk and confused parents, no doubt, but only the hardest of heart could deny a certain beauty in the glint of the draped lights through foggy breath as couples walk arm-in-arm. Ahem.
129. Henry St before Christmas
Conversely, full of children and stalls, Henry Street in the darkest days of the year isn&t particularly romantic, but there&s something satisfying about haggling over your deal for multiple selection boxes.
130. Sea salt and brown bread ice cream from Murphy&s
Ireland&s humble milch cow is responsible for a lot of the item&s here. Full credit to Murphy&s of Exchequer St. and elsewhere for running with that and turning it into unlikely, delicious ice cream though.
131. Ireland changes without you
It might seem that, as Joyce had a tendency to implied, Ireland is locked in stasis, running in circles rather than forward. But if you go, it will not wait for you. The city in your mind is a snapshot, not a living place.
132. The Hideout House
Hidden away off the North Circular Road on Campbell&s Row, the Hideout House is in the tradition of the housing estate pub, set into a big house, but it&s lively, unpretentious and it provides free sandwiches after Dublin matches.
133. Big Monster Love
The only Dublin indie pop act with an encyclopaedic knowledge of Irish folk music, Big Monster Love&s odes to Swords and sweets sung in a sonorous northside accent make him the de facto poet laureate.
134. Jumping in the Liffey for a bet
You&ve thought about doing it, but until a possibly mitching Leon took the 50 euro wager and put the results on Youtube, you lacked the inspiration to do anything about it. Remember though: it&s freezing, obviously, it&s water.
135. Dunsink Observatory
On the first and third Wednesday of every month it&s possible to visit one of Ireland&s oldest scientific institutions and look at the stars the way they were meant to be seen & through a huge telescope beside a dump.
136. Ringing the bells in Christchurch
The guided tour of Dublin&s millennium-old cathedral features the opportunity to ring its bells under supervision, and if you just want to play the hunchback, all you need to do is email ringingmaster@cccdub.ie and ask.
137. Pubs that are institutions
Kehoe&s on Anne Street, the Long Hall on Aungier Street, Mulligans on Poolbeg Street, the Palace Bar on Fleet Street. Each unique in its own right, and each better than any pub in any other country. Science fact.
138. Windsurfing
Perhaps unsurprisingly, Dublin Bay is a great place to go windsurfing on a squally day. Go to Dollymount and look out for international star Mikey Clancy, who&s there most days flying through the air as you paddle past.
139. Botanic Gardens
If you really must be in a tropical climate, the Botanic (or, colloquially, Botanical) Gardens in Glasnevin afford you the opportunity to lounge in the jungle-like glasshouses along with the cat who seems to never be awake.
140. The Ha&penny Bridge
The best way to cross the Liffey on foot, the 1816 cast-iron bridge was iconic long before Phil Lynott walked over in the Old Town video. If you can&t use the Ha&penny Bridge itself, then the adjacent, boring Millennium Bridge provides a good view.
141. The Science Gallery
If you stopped learning things when you were 24, one visit to the Trinity-outskirt living museum will reinitiate your education. Consistently manages to host imaginative, sometimes yucky exhibits.
142. Poker
For some reason, poker became the national pastime in the last decade or so. Arrive sober at 3am to collect money from reckless drunks in the Fitzwilliam Card Club or the Voodoo on Arran Quay.
143. Irish Yeast Company
Need to buy yeast? Buy it from 11.30-1.30 at the Irish Yeast Company, which has been confusing people on College Street with its apparent lack of financial viability since time immemorial
144. North Great Georges Street
The jewel of Dublin&s northside Georgian quarter is home to Mr. Norris and, according to commentator Jim Ross in what seems bizarrely specific for American television, the birthplace of former WWE World Heavyweight Champion Sheamus.
145. Seagulls
They&re taking over. Whether bullying pigeons in Trinity or pretending to be ducks in Stephen&s Green, seagulls have decided that tourist leftovers belong to them.
146. Jewish Quarter
Portobello was once the home of the Jewish community in Ireland. Since providing Israel with its sixth president, Chaim Herzog, the population waned, but the Bretzl Bakery on Lennox Street and the museum at the South Circular Road keep the memory alive.
147. Music Hall
In what is basically Ireland&s only claim to fancy classical music credibility, Georg Friedrich Handel debuted his Messiah in the Great Music Hall on Fishamble Street. It&s gone now, but there are celebrations every April in commemoration.
148. Black Church
Rooted perhaps in fear of Protestantism, there is a myth that walking three times around the Black Church (around the corner from Mountjoy Street) will have you face to face with the devil. Decide what you want for your soul in advance.
149. Toilet of Pintxos
The tapas are delicious, no doubt, but the real reason to visit is to pay a visit to the absurdly opulent toilets, all scarlet and gold. Being &on the throne& is not a euphemism in Pintxos bathroom.
150. Toilets of everywhere else
Se&n &O Faol&in once claimed that the short story was the medium of the Irish. He is wrong, of course. The medium of the Irish is the door and wall of the toilet cubicle, where the drunken poets of the nation conduct their salons.
Aside from the ever-changing, impressive collection of modern art in its confines, the buildings and wonderfully designed gardens of the Royal Hospital at Kilmainhaim are reason enough to visit.&152. Georges Street Launderette
It&s December. You&re wet as an otter&s pocket and colder than a nun&s something or other. FYL. FYL. FYL. Then, halfway up Georges Street, a motherly hug of warm air and just-ironed shirt scent embraces you. The best 2 second blast of wind you could hope for.
153. Wax Museum criers
Employed by the Wax Museum beside Bank of Ireland College Green to rope in tourists and passers-by, the jaunty hats and period costume of the Wax Museum criers all but demand that you speak to them in olde-timey fashion. Expect them to respond in kind.
154. Traditional Japanese throat singer
No-one knows where he came from, or what he&s doing there, or even if he&s definitely a man, but the person in East Asian costume scraping a stick and producing tuneless sound with his throat on Grafton Street deserves the freedom of the city by now.
155. The walls
On Cook Street, below St. Audoen&s Church, there&s a big stretch of Dublin&s old medieval wall still intact. Go to it and reminisce about a time before suburban sprawl, when the city was a mile wide and culchies had to pay to get in.
156. The Queen
The Queen of England, enemy of Celtic fans and extremely drunk people citywide, visited Ireland this year and, to our eternal credit, we didn&t do anything to embarrass ourselves. She didn&t drink the Guinness though.
157. Jameson Tower
Dublin&s not a city with a lot of tall structures, so the old chimney of the Jameson distillery in Smithfield provides a really good opportunity to survey matters from above and see how many of the churches you can name.
158. Chapters & Relocated from the oppressive confines of an Abbey Street basement to a huge, bright upper floor on Parnell Street, Chapters& giant collection of second hand books continues to look after your budget and your mind.
159. The Hop House
Have you ever wondered where all the thirty-somethings in Massive Attack t-shirts go for the 51 weekends between Electric Picnics? They go to the Hop House on Parnell Street to drink bottles of Korean homebrew.
160. Patrick Kavanagh
He wanted to be commemorated by the water, so when he died, Dublin celebrated the nation&s most cantankerous poet with a ponderous statue, seated on a bench beside the Grand Canal. A fitting tribute.
161. The other canal
Oft-forgotten because of its unfashionable position on the northside, the Royal Canal&s actually longer than the Grand Canal and, if nothing else, provides an excellent daytime can-drinking spot for youths headed to Hill 16 on sunny days.
162. Winter ice-skating
It&s stressful trying to navigate the one-way system of Smithfield&s seasonal ice rink, weaving around couples doing the stereotypical couples thing and trying to avoid that one kid going 70 miles an hour. But it&s fun.
163. Bus back entertainment
Losing touch with the kids is an impossibility for Dublin Bus passengers since someone came up with the idea of putting speakers in mobile phones. And Super Bass is actually not that bad.
164. Public clocks disagreeing
Flann O&Brien, listing examples of &Irishness& in his Irish Times column, astutely noted that the public timepieces of our fair isle very rarely tell the same time. This confusion is why you are always late.
165. Cineworld unlimited card
For a mere twenty euro a month, you can see every film shown in Cineworld on Parnell Street. You can even see them multiple times, if you are really that into Ryan Gosling movies.
166. The lads in top hats at the Westin
They&re wearing top hats and fancy suits, and they&re pretty much paid to be nice to everyone. So put your arm around one, hold your drink in the air with the other hand, and smile for the camera.
167. Wood Quay amphitheatre
Dublin City Council, still known as the Corpo to elder statesemen bar-props, is a horrible structure on an incredibly important historical site. But it does have a cool amphitheatre out the back for some reason.
168. Irish Times building
There is unending amusement to be derived from staring into the lit-up new Irish Times office on Tara Street and trying to spot R&is&n Ingle. She&s probably never there, but we&ll keep trying.
169. George Salmon statue
Famous for announcing that women would be allowed to study in Trinity over his dead body, former provost George Salmon surveys Front Square with a look of mild disgust on his face. Probably because of all the women.
170. Mario building
Beside Tara Street train station, there is a large building with a variety of pyramids atop it that could not feasibly be used for anything other than a level of Super Mario.
171. Kilmainham Gaol
Fill your ears with candle wax to drown out the uninformed and belittling questions of tourists as you tour Kilmainham Gaol either for its importance during the War of Independence or just because it is a bad-ass old jail.
172. Old city characters
From Bang Bang, who shot passers-by with his finger well into middle age, to the old traffic director at Essex Bridge who is said to have refused a job in Times Square because he liked the look of Capel Street, Dublin has a history of producing &characters&.
173. Resentment of success
How do we feel about your promotion/competition win/nice-looking hair cut? We hate it. Who do you think you are, Bono? And who does Bono think he is, for that matter, the Pope?
174. The smell
You don&t notice it until you&ve been away for a while, but Dublin has a very distinctive smell. Not a bad one, necessarily, but a distinctive one. It&s something to do with the climate, possibly.
175. It&s really old
Dublin was founded in 841 (not, as everyone confusingly asserted, 988), which makes it at least 700 years older than New York and thus able to beat it up.
176. Jonathan Swift
The old Dean of St. Patrick&s Cathedral once suggested that the rich of the city eat the poor, as a solution to rampant poverty. He was joking, of course, and thus invented Dublin wit in 1729. &Imitate him if you dare&, as his epitaph says.
177. Two degrees of separation
Everyone you meet knows someone you know. This is a scientifically verifiable fact.
178. Dublin Castle
Started in 1204 on the orders of King John, famous for being mean to Robin Hood, the Castle is where most of the important matters in Dublin&s history happened. Its gardens, on the supposed site of the pool after which Dubhlinn is named, are quiet and strange in a nice way.
179. Collins Barracks
The longest continuously occupied barracks in the world up until 1997 is now the National Museum&s decorative arts branch, and it&s full of curios, from King Billy&s gauntlet to Wolfe Tone&s pocket book.
180. The Croppy Acre
The park in front of Collins Barracks is said to contain the unmarked graves of executed 1798 rebels, its memorial providing a reminder that the new museum has a slightly grislier past than most.
181. Crusties
Whether becoming competent with the diablo or occupying Dame Street, Dublin&s crusties seem less self-righteous than those of other places. Without them, music festivals would all be Oxegen.
182. Music festivals
Within half a day&s drive from town, as literally everything on the island of Ireland is, there are a whole array of fun music festivals to attend in the summer, from the mighty Electric Picnic right down to Annagassan, Co. Louth&s van-themed Vantastival.&183. The Spire
Say what you want about its cost, its pointlessness or its phallic connotations, the Monument of Light gave Dublin a recognisable skyline.
184. Poolbeg Towers
No matter where you are or what you&re doing, those twin towers in Ringsend are working hard on providing you with electricity, and being iconic.
185. Green With Envy
Flea markets, car boot sales and clothes swaps seem to be popping up everywhere these days but fashion middle-man Green With Envy, Rathmines Road has taken the pain out of flogging your once treasured garb.
186. Rathmines Library
We owe the existence of this little gem to the so called &patron saint of libraries&, a philanthropic American by the name of Andrew Carnegie, widely known for the famous Carnegie Hall.
187. Twinned With Beijing
As of this year, Dublin expanded its twin list beyond San Jose, California, Liverpool, England and Barcelona, Spain to include the capital of China, which will hopefully be useful when it runs the world.
188. The River Poddle
You can&t see it but it&s there, underneath you on Dame Street running into the Liffey. Most people don&t even know that.
189. Ghosts
From Darkey Kelly on Copper Alley to the Green Lady of St. Audoen&s, Dublin is full of ghosts, which would have been a bad thing until Harry Potter made them seem less spooky.
190. Dan Rooney
America&s ambassador to Ireland resides in the Phoenix Park, where he spent two months preparing a professional standard American football pitch for a casual July 4th game that included both US Marines and McAleese children. He owns the Pittsburgh Steelers, by the way.
191. The Cobblestone
Walking into a knackered boozer at 5 on a Saturday afternoon to find 8 beardy lads singing ballads over cups of tae.
192. Our prowess at insults
Poxbottle, hunga, dose, wetzer, you smell like a hoor&s handbag.193. Funderland
We lack a permanent fairground, so during those glorious 3 weeks over Christmas a rusty, crusty, money-grabbing behemoth pops up the whole world and its little brother can be found abusing carnies and shifting behind the Terminator at the RDS.
194. The Aviva Stadium
Even if you don&t make it to an international, the sight of a real modern stadium on TV when we play small Baltic states makes you feel like we&re better than them, at least infrastructurally.
195. Dublin Zoo
OK, so your abiding memory from childhood might be squinting into the hippo pool for half an hour because they can&t be arsed performing for you, but when the monkeys start messing and the penguins are Michelle de Bruining around the place, the Zoo is pretty much untouchable.
196. Coddle
This remains the only place in the world it is acceptable to eat the components of a fry in soup.
197. Mary Shrines
Vestiges of our ultra-Catholic recent past exist in the variety of sometimes-pretty, sometimes tacky shrines of Our Lady dotted around the city. Collect &em all at /
198. Bullet-holes in buildings
You can actually touch history if you visit Boland&s Mills, the GPO, and a variety of other places.
199. The National Concert Hall
With rumours that it&s unoccupied rooms will become a new branch of IMMA in the light of Dublin Contemporary&s success, the NCH is a spectacular building. Its cheap lunchtime concerts are an excellent starting point for the classically uninitiated.
200. Totally Dublin
Sure where&d you be without us?
Compiled by Karl McDonald, with help from the T.D. staff. Illustrated by Fuchsia Macaree.From 《Irish Times》
情迷爱尔兰
追逐文学和音乐梦的人,大概是放不过爱尔兰的。那片冷静含蓄的土地上,乔伊斯和叶芝 的凝重,风笛般幽深游荡,在含混又清缪的世界,生命被卷起又放下,犹如恩雅或是U2的音乐:要么筑起高墙,独自关在城堡,要么癫狂在癫狂,让生活莫名眩幻。而此刻你之想成为爱尔兰草原上的一棵树,一缕风,那么寂寞,那么热烈&&&朋友从爱尔兰回来,是因为学校放长假,他身上还带着爱尔兰草原特有的气质和阳光的味道,听他讲漂亮小镇dalkey,他是专程去追寻恩雅的足迹的,据他描述恩雅住在dalkey一个叫Ayesh的城堡里,城堡周围的围墙很高,据当地人说恩雅正在打报告给当地政府,要求加高城墙,以防止像他这样 的歌迷去拍照。&&爱尔兰的草原实在太美了,我相信每一个游客在绿色的草原站久了都会变成一棵迎风婆娑的树&他陶醉的微微闭上眼睛,&更难忘的是在 ballymaloe,那里的黑羊晚上就睡在你一眼能望到的草原上,那里有全世界著名的烹饪学校,不远处便是大海,能尝到刚刚钓上来的大龙虾,还有招牌菜 炖牛肉和烟熏三鱼&&&&傍晚,他被Hayden农场好客的主人请去做客,后来他才知道这家农场是著名的Baileys甜酒的牛奶供应商,农场的一头奶牛每天要吃100 公斤草。想想看这农场有多大!主人说这边的森林里有鹿,狐狸和黑熊,不过它们都很害羞。爱尔兰属于异常内秀的地方。我想即使只是静静地呆在那里,你也能感 到与世俗无关的静谧和独特内涵。&如果能巧遇细雨的话,绿草的滋润与颜色会诱惑到你,令你有这样一种冲动:赶紧变成一头牛,一天吃100公斤草&他的话语 令我也蠢蠢欲动,仿佛心也漂向远方,想追随他的脚步领略爱尔兰的湖光山色。&  当地人都喜欢在海湾里游泳,海滩的天鹅自在的享受阳光。美丽的爱尔兰海把它们包裹在薰衣草和迷迭的芳香里。我本能地认为海的对岸就可以看见利物 浦俱乐部的训练场地,但朋友给我说距离比想象得要远很多很多,隔着茫茫一大片海。不过,他对这里的香料倒是抱着浓厚的兴趣。他说他看着海边大片大片的花海 在风中摇曳,香气飘向远方,仿佛在召唤着人们,让人沉醉。成熟后的香草鲜花被花农采下,送入制香工厂,那里的工厂流程相当科学精密,也有供游客参观的少量 开放式工作间,到过那里的人一定不会忘记带一些自己喜欢的制成品,朋友回来时就带着一大堆香草,干花和化妆品,洗面精油之类的东西到处送人。指的购买的特 产还有爱尔兰羊毛制品格子呢,WATER FORD水晶玻璃,爱尔兰威士忌,爱尔兰巧克力,或在小店淘爱尔兰传统音乐的CD。&  基尔肯尼是一座享有盛誉保留中世纪风貌的地方,朋友的偶像鲍勃。迪伦就专程选择这里举办过演出。客人住在这里既可以享受全爱尔兰最著名的冰激凌,享受周边宁静的田园风光,更可以欣赏家庭式的爱尔兰传统民谣表演。&  叶芝所有的诗里面,我记忆最深刻的就是《致时光十字架上的玫瑰》可能因为是强烈的民族情绪在里面,但对于游客,爱尔兰能赠予的是放牧的内心。
Dublin Zoo
Back in Dublin!
不卑不亢,清澈生活
我只是一个普通人,会流泪,会快乐,会感动,会固执,不是所有的一切我都能承受。
人生,一半是现实,一半是梦想。
我喜欢现在的自己,褪尽曾经的幼稚;我更喜欢明天的自己,会比今天更美丽。
做一个素净的人,把目光停留在微小而光明的事物上,远离那些混乱和嚣张。
美好的日子给你带来快乐,阴暗的日子给你带来经验。不要对生命中的任何一天怀有遗憾。
人生,从自己的哭声开始,在别人的泪水里结束,这中间的时光,就叫做幸福。
偶尔我只想一个人静静的就好, 不受任何打扰。不是冷漠,只想放空自己,感受生命美好。
我愿能朝着太阳生长,做一个温暖的人,不卑不亢,清澈生活。
These stunning photos from an Irish Air Corps patrol will take your breath away
Air Corps place Charlie 253
Irish 151 coming in to land
Passing Sligo Airport
Ben Bulben from above
Sligo from 20,000 ft
A sunny evening in Mayo
Over Wexford and Rosslare
As friends, we might not agree on everything. At least we all have Guinness in common.
这两只小浣熊有名字啦
The red panda twins from Dublin Zoo have been named - meet Zhen (female) and Bao (male)!
一座城市,一首情歌
&也许,你会魂牵梦萦地爱上一座从未到过的城市,只因那些图片和别人的文字。幻想有一天,独自背着行囊游走在这座城市中,然后,与城中的某位男子或者女子相爱。一座城市与一份爱情总有或多或少的牵绊。有多少人受过爱情的伤后,独自提着行李箱离开某座让其伤心地城市,并在以后的生活中,一再回避那个地方。直到有一天,伤,痊愈了,当再一次踏上那座城市时,不是伤感,而是唏嘘。在这里,或许有一首歌曲可以让你重新疯狂的见证并追寻你当时疯狂的爱恋。
Snow leopard after drinking Water
The Baby In Dublin Zoo
Dublin 全景
Dulbin Zoo Autumn
Dunboyne Castle Hotel & Spa
Less than a week to our highly anticipated Wedding Fair! Come see the hotel
今天周末&昨晚对面Party的人们吵闹到很晚
起的不早&昏昏沉沉就是十一点
对着窗外的阴云说一声 早安
冰箱里只有未开封的牛奶 要出门买豆奶&
刚下楼&一件秋衣加运动外套&
还是有些抵不住这秋凉
十二点的街上还很冷清&
Cineworld的门口没有人
零星几个人从身旁经过&
骑着Dublinbike的短白发硬朗老人
竖着尼龙长风衣的衬衣中年帅气男人
不知觉&秋天已经给人们换上厚厚的外衣
头上的云很低&阴沉沉没有阳光&风不大
整个人特别懒&就去最近的Lidl&一步也不想多走
左右手边的楼体 衬着灰蒙蒙的湿气 没多少生机
脚下踩着细碎的橙黄色枯叶 树木开始光秃
在超市里转了一圈儿
买了三瓶豆奶一袋土豆和胡萝卜&结账
往家走时T字路口的红灯亮着 没有车
经过了三个路口就到了楼下&身旁经过的车辆极少
拿钥匙用左手开门&能看到东边路尽头的绿色穹顶
大步跑上楼&棕面包&果酱&豆奶,有选择的早餐&让人感觉真好,厨房的垃圾桶满了&豪哥去倒垃圾。
下午两点钟看了最新的海贼王 。罗说:&白胡子&旧时代&新世界&新战力,顶上战争只不过是序章 ,历史的洪流只能顺应&无法抵御,豪杰们的新时代即将来临,时代的齿轮已经被我破坏&,罗你也太霸气了吧 俺要向你学习。&
三点是吃土豆时间 ,昨晚做好的土豆放微波炉里两分钟就好。现在是下午四点钟&有阳光,我还浸在早上无风冷清的街上,楼下有小孩子玩闹的声音。
时间一过去&就如梦幻一场,你认为值得 就去驻足停留,那车&那人&那商店&那阴云 终变了形状。
早安 城市 我爱阳光
& & & & & & & & & & & & & & & & & & & & & & & & & 13 10 21013
木叶簌簌轻念声
雾锁秋晨&云是睡着的雨水&一个转身走过多雨清萧的安闷午后忽然某一刻&很强烈地执念&那些曾经遇见与未曾相遇的朋友&一定会在未来的某一刻注定相逢吧就在这趟行船关津的旅途上一个染着十里灯塔的秋雨帘堤中&浅日下&微凉微凉的笑着一如素颜女子工笔白描中墨疏的韵白一千个黄昏从昨天逝去一千又一个黎明在今天诞临暮色阑珊兴尽&年岁寂寂苍寥秋雨欣凉吣缃&此去经年轻念
& & & & & & & & & & & & & & & & & & & & & & & & & & & & & & & & & & & & & & & & & & & & & & & & & & & & & 12 10 2013
&注:吣读作qīn&&亲吻。&缃:浅黄色&此处借指凋落的木叶。
Jessie J The O2 Dublin on the 16th of October 2013
喜欢Jessie J 就去吧
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