The main "ruin" to see was the theater. It was amazing to see how much of it was left, and though we were not allowed on the bleachers, the first group of performing students read a passage from Antigone as we watched from the orchestra pit. (It's a tradition on the Greece Trip for some students to read/perform excerpts from great works that we've studied on site).
While the theater was impressive however, as were the remains of a temple, what really caught my breath were the surrounding mountains.
As I stood up on a torn down wall of what used to be a temple (which was at one point turned into a Catholic church) I saw everything. Nature of course, rocks and rocks of course, people taking pictures, talking, admiring, and (as corny as it may sound) I imagined the ancient Greeks there with us for the first time. I wondered what thoughts had crept into their own minds as they had climbed up the theater excited for the performances to come, what they had thought as they themselves may have stood on a tall point and stared at the magnificent mountains...
Needless to say, it was an extremely good first site to visit.
It seems magical how an entire culture can come alive around you. Even just by your words I can feel some of it - I can't even imagine how immersed you must have felt.
ResponderEliminar