Further statues and "The Spire of Dublin" await you - the latter was erected to mark the millennium and is also known as "The Stiletto in the Ghetto". Just one more example of Dublin wit, the nearby statue of James Joyce being known as "The Prick with the Stick". Of the impressive buildings on O'Connell Street the General Post Office on the left takes pride of place. This was the central fighting area of 1916 but has been lovingly restored - it is open to the public during daytime as it still is Dublin's GPO. Have a look around and maybe buy some commemorative stamps in the Philatelic Office. Then continue up O'Connell Street, past the trompe d'oeil Carlton Cinema and on to the Parnell Statue.
Charles Stuart Parnell is remembered more low-key than O'Connell but his monument is among the most beautiful in Dublin. Walk around it and read the names of all 32 counties ... including pre-independence "King's County" and "Queen's County". Carry on past the "Ambassador" (a former cinema converted to a rock venue) for a walk around Parnell Square. You will pass a small monument with a broken chain and an Irish inscription commemorating the founding of the nationalist Irish Volunteers in 1913 on your left.


