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Christ Church Cathedral |
We
arrived at Oxford weary and wet from the Southern Excursion. We had enjoyed our experience
immensely, but we were all excited to settle into one place for a while and to
have some clean clothes. Upon our
arrival, President Ryken paid us a surprise visit. He welcomed us to Oxford and gave us some tips on being
Wheaties in Oxford since he himself once studied here.
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Part of the beautiful Boudalin Library |
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More of the library |
Oxford
works very differently than American universities. Oxford University itself is made up of about 36
colleges. I am studying at St.
Anne’s College, which is a fairly new one. When you attend Oxford, you attend only one of these
colleges, but you have to be admitted by your college and by the
university. You attend school for
three years, and you have three terms each year that are each eight weeks
long. The breaks between terms are
long, but you are expected to study.
There are no liberal arts here; you pick your subject in high school and
you continue to study it throughout college. You attend one lecture once a week, and the rest of the time
you work with your tutor. You
receive no grades until your final exam of college. You usually take three exams, each three hours long. How you do on those exams determines
your grade and standing for your whole college experience. This makes my finals weeks at Wheaton
look significantly less stressful.
We
all have our own room at St. Anne’s.
It is nice and cozy and has a window seat, which is my favorite
part. Every day a scout comes by
and makes our bed and gives us a new towel. The most fascinating part to me about my dorm is the
bathrooms. They are communal, but
they are divided up in very interesting ways. Two rooms have one toilet and one sink that is the smallest sink
known to mankind. Another room contains a tub but no showerhead. The room next to it has two sinks and
one mirror. After that is a room
containing a shower. We then also
have a mirror in the hallway. This
makes for two mirrors for a floor of seven girls. It is a good way to cut down on vanity.
One
thing Oxford does extremely well is meal times and food. Meals are served at one set time and we
all eat together family style, which is good for building community. Breakfast is cafeteria style, lunch is
buffet, and dinner is served to us.
The food is amazing! I have yet to have anything I don’t like.
Our
days consist of classes and a fair amount of free time for studying and
enjoying Oxford. Downtown Oxford
is simply a ten-minute walk away.
It is filled with shops, pubs, coffee and teashops, and the best
bookstore known to mankind: Blackwells.
C.S. Lewis once remarked that Oxford is a dangerous place to live as
book-lover because of all the bookstores.
He wasn’t kidding.
Blackwells has five floors of books and a café. I’ve considered moving in there.
Since
coming here, we have learned some new lingo: to be “up at Oxford” refers to the
geographical location of Oxford since it is set on high ground. “To go down from Oxford” is to leave
town. “To be sent down from
Oxford” is to be kicked out of school for bad behavior.
We
have also discovered the amazing changeability of British weather. For most of the weekend it rained
consistently. Today it would pour
rain for about twenty minutes, the sun would come out for an hour, then it
would pour, then the sun came out, etc.
This cycle has repeated all day.
I’ve learned to always dress prepared for any type of weather.
My
first week has been busy here.
Here is a recap of all I have seen:
-We have gone on a great many walking tours with Dr.
Ryken. We did one at University
Park, which is beautiful. I went
back there one day to read on a bench and discovered the bench I had sat down
on was dedicated in Tolkien’s honor!
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Tolkien's Bench! |
-We walked around Port Meadow, which was a favorite haunt of
Hopkins. We saw the small town of
Binsey and it’s church which had a well known for healing powers. Henry VIII himself went there to try
the waters in hope of curing infertility.
The walk was beautiful, and we got to see what life was like in a small
pastoral English town. We ended it
with homemade strawberry ice cream from a local strawberry patch.
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The Well |
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Church at Binsey |
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Port Meadow |
-Went to a celebration of the 150th year
publication of Alice in Wonderland in
Christ Church Park. Families were
there, people were dressed up in crazy outfits, a big band played, free
lollipops were given out, and there was dancing. It was like a British garden party gone absurd.
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With a Dodo Bird at the Alice Celebration |
-I saw the Olympic Torch come through Oxford!
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The Torch...You can't see it very well because of the flag the little girl is waving |
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The Torch from behind |
-Ate at The Eagle and Child, which is where the Inklings,
including Lewis and Tolkien, spent their time discussing their works
-Saw Hamlet performed at one of the University’s
theatres. It was a wonderful
performance, but the theatre was outside.
Of course, it rained during Act III. True to British form, we put up our rain hoods, kept calm,
and carried on. I was amazed at
how the rain did not affect the actors at all. I am surprised by how many outdoor theatres the British have
(every theatre in Oxford is outside) give the propensity of rain here.
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Shivering at Hamlet! |
It has been a good week so far, but we have a lot of work to
do in the next couple weeks!