The wifi here at the Leeson Bridge is stellar, and it’s easy to add photos, probably too many photos. It’s quiet too, as long as the windows facing the back lane are closed. We thought €12 per person was a bit steep for breakfast, and went in search of a cafe.
Another feature is the bathroom, where the shower screen ends 300mm short of the floor. It had one of those electric water heaters that needs a minimum torrent to stabilise at a constant flow and temperature, using about a megawatt of electricity. This left the entire bathroom floor wet and slippery. The hotel is generous with the heat though, and it dries before too long.
We found a bookstore with a cafe, had breakfast there, and noted a couple of book titles I’ll get from Amazon. I have several books on the iPad I haven’t found time to read.
We wondered why a Catholic cathedral would charge entry. Usually the C of E charges entry in the UK, but not Catholic churches. Turns out this one is C of E too.
This raised the question of where the Catholic cathedral is in this capital of a nominally Catholic country. I had to Google it. It’s north of the Liffey, tourist buses don’t go by there.
The answer appears to be simply that the Catholic cathedrals became C of E in Ireland at the same time as they did in England during the reign of Henry VIII. The English didn’t see the need for a grand Catholic cathedral in Dublin during all the years they ran Ireland.
It seemed like a good time to complete our interrupted circuit of Dublin by bus before finding dinner somewhere. We found the stop we alighted at yesterday and boarded the next bus to come along. He was finishing too, but took us around the corner to where another yellow bus picked us up.