We went on a bus tour of Dublin today. We saw the old Georgian (built during the regins of Georges II and III of England) part of the city, the United States Ambassador's house, the Irish President's house, and last Trinity College. We got out at Trinity and saw the Book of Kells. That book is amazing. We also drove by the Christ's Church Cathedral and went into St. Patrick's Cathedral. They started out Catholic, but were later (and still are) Presbeterian. These cathedrals are amazing. The man that wrote Gulliver's Travels (Jonathan Swift) is buried in St. Patricks. Tonight we went to the Abbey Theater to see "Juno and the Paycock," a play about the Irish Civil War (about 1921-1922) by Sean O'Casey. It was amazing. That was one of the best theatrical preformances I've ever seen. It was about a "normal" family whose son (Johnny?) lost an arm and was shot in the hip fighting for the Union, an daughter (Mary) who's a flirt and ends up getting pregnant out of wedlock and the guy deserts her, a drunk father, the mother (main character, Juno) who holds the family together, and their neighbors. One neighbor's son dies fighting for the Loyalists. Johnny dies in the end. I'm going to miss Ireland.