[morgueatlarge] Lisboa continues to be pretty cool

It is hard to breakfast in Portugal. At least, breakfast as we Kiwis understand it. We want eggs! We want big bowls of muesli and toast! We want something other than ham and cheese sandwiches!

Dean and Kerry and Ethan have set off north leaving Leon and me in Lisbon for a bit longer. I´m not finished here yet, I love the place. It feels very comfortable, with rolling hills like Wellington and a city centre that is full of activity and energy but without the odd moments of threatening unease that pop up in other cities I’ve been in so far. I am continually reminded of Jose Saramago’s ‘The Year of the Death of Ricardo Reis’, the book that inspired me to visit Portugal in the first place (thanks Billy for the loan of that), which was set in the very streets I’m walking now. There are posters everywhere for a movie based on Saramago’s newer book ‘the stone raft’,about the Iberian peninsula breaking off, and I just bought ‘Blindness’ by him to read – i’ve finished the massive tome of Rutherfurd’s ‘London’ which has been my travelling companion for the last month. I now know more about London than before. Cool.

The hostel in Lisbon is not bad at all, and pleasingly cheap. As is becoming typical, the whole dorm room Leon and I ended up in went drinking together, along with the girl who checked into a different room at the same time as we did in the morning (this is Andrea, I mention her again in a bit so remember her name). Today we all went out to Sintra to see a 9th century Moorish castle and a more recent Royal Palace, both spectacular in their own ways and with commanding views of the whole region right out to the sea. They’re so close to each other, too, about five minutes walk on a narrow forested hill road.

The castle overlooking the Lisboa old town is amazing as well, clearly a fortress made to be defended. There was a 12 week seige at the place and as I walked around I was struck by how everything about it was made to withstand that kind of attack. I think the most evocative thing about old places is their structure and the story it tells about an aspect of historical life.

In Andrea’s (remember her?) dorm room is Rachel Pope, who I worked with at Massey University. She left work a week or two before I did and I’d wondered what became of her. Now I know. We met at breakfast, which in the hostel is served by the most emotional, agitated and frustrating old lady
I’ve ever encountered. She’s so bad she’s actually a good point. We put up
with it because it’s hard to get good breakfasts here.

Later
morgue

[waybackmachine link to original]

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