We took the DART back to Dublin from Powerscourt Gardens. If anyone ever visits there, I highly recommend taking the DART out that way (and then you'll need a cab or you can take a bus) to visit the estate; the DART ride is nice as are the gardens...and they are way better than the tour company that ripped us off.
The Garden of Remembrance is a memorial to those who fought and gave their lives in the 1916 Easter Rising. The memorial pool is in the shape of a cross and is surrounded by a stone walkway complete with flower boxes and benches.
![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEhBcwINl_2JUbvmgnpFqy6_Gq-1URZ15X2u3wQLza7TrdSkZYlU98iMIZU9owDk7HofH4uLLdQDRsXz6fpZ-GDfssZHibGiM-3f6_0WcH71FfXt51jy94OP75MlgFVc6X2nkXp2/s400/33-Garden-Remembrance.jpg)
The bottom of the pool is a mosaic of rippling waves and different offensive and defensive arms. It was a Celtic custom that weapons were broken and thrown into the river at the conclusion of a battle. This act signified the end of hostilities.
![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEiPuPr04QGd_p2Y-KbCr2uk9qg7FEIpNk4tp5nG8l_PDqt9RTtFYENeTXkb_h4Jf-1vb-BJCUXh7uZMSUpZ9qQZb44UiHNq6e5yiCUIhsCg_Zl1OAKGdSzH6zvpkqLeC_eBoY0w/s400/34-Tiles.jpg)
At the far end of the memorial is this statue:
![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEgc_esANr964uTA1kVU3wQ-Imfx5zzkbtes2mWOMU1COIAltOqYc4mPxn2632ywfAyEznxy4m_7LLHRQeB8MMCvPbPr2lA16Uz6seQkCbYErdIUpk1CbqKFDqWWz9V6kXOlZhIq/s400/35-Statue.jpg)
It is the "Children of Lir" by OisÃn Kelly, and it symbolizes rebirth and resurrection.
In 1976 a contest was held to find a poem that accurately captured the emotions and meaning of Ireland's fight for freedom. Dublin born Liam Mac Uistin, won with his composition "We Saw a Vision".
His poem is displayed in Irish, French, and English on the stone wall at the end of the monument.
![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEhj1ewqQQ8lR54peZXzI0ivztBnSvM1-6U5Dv1DUH5-q3Eci66GFUxKXCMMfh5tzC_1hkcH3HZKLYycLeDQIPMNS0lyHMt1WP99bjkC42Un2KUsEfBwD4OjlaVdRt8yGpibqi3M/s400/36-Plaque.jpg)
It reads:
We Saw A Vision
In the darkness of despair we saw a vision, We lit the light of hope, And it was not extinguished, In the desert of discouragement we saw a vision, We planted the tree of valour, And it blossomed
In the winter of bondage we saw a vision, We melted the snow of lethargy, And the river of resurrection flowed from it.
We sent our vision aswim like a swan on the river, The vision became a reality, Winter became summer, Bondage became freedom, And this we left to you as your inheritance.
O generation of freedom remember us, The generation of the vision.
![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEhqmOYQ5mHr3Fz_4Og84k4krN1SQFHRLigECp-YNXuhGX8nmYfpz6KGZXMYLRzKsllY47-dw7gtmQ6B7HFMqn8GE_zbX9W8sIb5K99e0sYumIz458siZ4O7ctTgKxy97pJa4YRA/s400/37-Irish.jpg)
I think anyone who has ever fought for anything can relate to this moving place.
The Garden of Remembrance is a memorial to those who fought and gave their lives in the 1916 Easter Rising. The memorial pool is in the shape of a cross and is surrounded by a stone walkway complete with flower boxes and benches.
![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEhBcwINl_2JUbvmgnpFqy6_Gq-1URZ15X2u3wQLza7TrdSkZYlU98iMIZU9owDk7HofH4uLLdQDRsXz6fpZ-GDfssZHibGiM-3f6_0WcH71FfXt51jy94OP75MlgFVc6X2nkXp2/s400/33-Garden-Remembrance.jpg)
The bottom of the pool is a mosaic of rippling waves and different offensive and defensive arms. It was a Celtic custom that weapons were broken and thrown into the river at the conclusion of a battle. This act signified the end of hostilities.
![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEiPuPr04QGd_p2Y-KbCr2uk9qg7FEIpNk4tp5nG8l_PDqt9RTtFYENeTXkb_h4Jf-1vb-BJCUXh7uZMSUpZ9qQZb44UiHNq6e5yiCUIhsCg_Zl1OAKGdSzH6zvpkqLeC_eBoY0w/s400/34-Tiles.jpg)
At the far end of the memorial is this statue:
![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEgc_esANr964uTA1kVU3wQ-Imfx5zzkbtes2mWOMU1COIAltOqYc4mPxn2632ywfAyEznxy4m_7LLHRQeB8MMCvPbPr2lA16Uz6seQkCbYErdIUpk1CbqKFDqWWz9V6kXOlZhIq/s400/35-Statue.jpg)
It is the "Children of Lir" by OisÃn Kelly, and it symbolizes rebirth and resurrection.
In 1976 a contest was held to find a poem that accurately captured the emotions and meaning of Ireland's fight for freedom. Dublin born Liam Mac Uistin, won with his composition "We Saw a Vision".
His poem is displayed in Irish, French, and English on the stone wall at the end of the monument.
![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEhj1ewqQQ8lR54peZXzI0ivztBnSvM1-6U5Dv1DUH5-q3Eci66GFUxKXCMMfh5tzC_1hkcH3HZKLYycLeDQIPMNS0lyHMt1WP99bjkC42Un2KUsEfBwD4OjlaVdRt8yGpibqi3M/s400/36-Plaque.jpg)
It reads:
We Saw A Vision
In the darkness of despair we saw a vision, We lit the light of hope, And it was not extinguished, In the desert of discouragement we saw a vision, We planted the tree of valour, And it blossomed
In the winter of bondage we saw a vision, We melted the snow of lethargy, And the river of resurrection flowed from it.
We sent our vision aswim like a swan on the river, The vision became a reality, Winter became summer, Bondage became freedom, And this we left to you as your inheritance.
O generation of freedom remember us, The generation of the vision.
![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEhqmOYQ5mHr3Fz_4Og84k4krN1SQFHRLigECp-YNXuhGX8nmYfpz6KGZXMYLRzKsllY47-dw7gtmQ6B7HFMqn8GE_zbX9W8sIb5K99e0sYumIz458siZ4O7ctTgKxy97pJa4YRA/s400/37-Irish.jpg)
I think anyone who has ever fought for anything can relate to this moving place.
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