While in Athens, we are staying with a close friend. Ευαγγελια (Evangelia) is a lovely person who is making our stay perfect—making us amazing diners and showing us aspects of her country that would otherwise be inaccessible to us.
The View from Poseidon's Temple |
The history spills from the land in Greece and leaves impressions everywhere. In Athens, most houses sit on five civilizations. The Islamic Museum is carefully built around the old wall of Athens and has glass walled rooms for its viewing. It seems that each Greek town has an archeological temple dedicated to some other deity. While most Greeks don’t frequent the temples, their history is a cause of pride, much like the Statue of Liberty for the Americans, or Eiffel Tower for the French.
I feel closer to this temple than the Acropolis; it feels purer and less touched by the passage of centuries. It is easy to imagine this place inhabited by Poseidon, the divine spirit of the ocean. Between the wind that almost pushed me over, the bright blue ocean, and the gleaming pillars of stone—one adorned with Lord Byron’s name—I can easily view the landscape as it was 2000 years ago.
1 comment:
It's hard to imagine the amount of labor that went into building these monuments. I wonder how many of our buildings will be here in 2000 years.
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