Paris has stuff to see in it. And every day, twenty-two year old Earlo
would venture forth, accompanied by the “Paris” chapter he has torn out of his Europe On Five Dollars A Day, and he’d
check out the sights.
The Arc de Triomphe
at the end of the Champs Elysees, the
iconic Eiffel Tower, the Louvre
museum, housing world-famous paintings, including Leonardo Da Vinci’s Mona
Lisa. I recall standing at the back
of a crowd gathered around the now-Plexiglas-encased treasure, crossing it off
my “Must-See When Visiting Paris” list, and moving on. Then, I remember stopping myself, and saying,
at least partially out loud,
“Earl! That’s the Mona Lisa. Go back and look at it!”
So I did.
I waited for the throng to disperse, and I sat on a bench opposite
the painting, giving it my undivided attention.
Hard as it is to believe, and even harder to prove, I can almost swear that the Mona Lisa was looking back at me.
And talking!
“Pretty good, eh?”
“Yeah!”
I won’t presume to explain it from a technique and
compositional standpoint, but when you just sit there and give it some time,
that 500 year-old portrait can really get under your skin.
I saw Notre Dame
Cathedral, minus the Hunchback. You have
to draw him in with your imagination, though when you look at the place, that
is not all that hard. It is unlikely
they would have an ogre of that description working on the premises today.
I would think it would be actionably discriminatory in our current times
to advertise in the paper: “Bell ringer needed.
Hunchbacks only!” The best they
could hope for is a guy with a mild stoop.
The Palace of
Versailles is a little out of town, or at least, an extended subway ride
away. Fortunately, the Paris subways were
great. I recall that there was this wall
map that, when you told it your destination, an illuminated trail of tiny bulbs
lit up, showing you the exact route to your destination, and which trains you would
be required to take, making it virtually impossible to get lost, even for me. (I get lost in Los Angeles all the time. Which is one reason I am reluctant to leave
the house.)
I did, however, receive a citation on the subway for sitting
in a seat specifically allocated to disabled veterans. It was an innocent mistake. I took French in High School, but the textbooks
involved children named Raymond and Suzette, who in their numerous adventures,
never once encountered a disabled veteran, so I did not recognize the words.
The cost of the ticket for this infraction, which the gendarme insisted on collecting on the
spot, took a big bite out of my five-dollar-a-day budget. My travel guide has not factored in “Citations
For Erroneously Occupying A Seat Designated For A Person Who Got Hurt In A
War.”
At the risk of sounding defensive, I actually feel this was
some kind of premeditated “tourist trap.” My butt had barely touched the seat before the
cop came flying at me, stylo (pen)
and Citation Pad at the ready! It was
like he laying in wait for me,
“Ho, ho, hon! I have caught-ed you!”
Versailles was
amazing, even though, it being March, the magnificent gardens were bereft of
flowers. Once again, you had to paint
them in with your imagination. The
opulent flowerbeds were a sight to behold.
And I’m a terrible painter!
For me, less memorable than the historic sights of Paris
were the everyday occurrences. Once,
around one P.M. or so, I started looking around for a place to eat, only to
find that the half a dozen restaurants I tried had signs hanging in their doors
saying,
“Closed For Lunch.”
I had never seen that before. In service-oriented America, the restaurants
are open at lunchtime, because…that’s
when the customers want to eat. In
Paris, at least to some degree, lunchtime is the designated period for the
restaurant employees to eat. You could see them in there, people in aprons
and chef’s hats, sitting around tables, stuffing their faces. And I’m on the outside going, “Hey! I’m hungry!”
I ended up, following my guidebook’s direction, lunching at
a cafeteria, which somehow found a less inconvenient time to feed its
personnel. I generally associate
cafeterias with the culinary atrocities of High School. Not so, however, in Paris.
Coq au vin. Delicate pastries. And the only available beverage: soda-sized
bottles of red wine. I recall distinctly,
after enjoying this bargain-basement banquet, walking out of the place, not
entirely steadily, slurring to no one in particular,
“I just got drunk in a cafeteria.”
Evenings were occupied with the standard Parisian
entertainments, Follies Bergere, and
so on, with one notable exception. I
bought tickets to see The Odd Couple, in French.
I was well acquainted with The Odd Couple from having seen productions of the play on Broadway
and in London. Between my familiarity
with the material and my High School French, I was easily to decipher a large
portion of Neil Simon’s comedy classic.
It was instructive to see the injection of cultural differences in the
proceedings. The French Odd Couple was more physical, with its
increased number of exaggerated gestures and ladle brandishing.
You know, reading this over, it occurs to me that, notwithstanding
the inevitable dulling of memory induced by the distancing passage of time, my
Parisian reminiscences lack the bursting excitement of my chronicles of London,
or of Rome, which demonstrably exhibit a greater enthusiasmical spark than the
current offering. My best explanation
for this may be simply that, at least comparatively, I am not as equally
smitten with Paris.
I’m not sure I get
it. I am aware, because I read a book
about it – David McCullough’s recommendable The
Greater Journey – that Americans have been traveling to Paris dating back
the earliest days of its (America’s) history, believing that, without the
Parisian experience under their belts, something was seriously lacking in their
educational, and sophisticational, development.
Writers, artists, students of medicine, they absolutely
swore by the place. I like it.
But I must truthfully acknowledge that Paris has never really knocked
off my feet.
This March, there are plans afoot for Dr. M and myself
(commemorating our March 21st anniversary), and Anna and her husband Colby
(celebrating Anna’s March 21st birthday) to take a two-couple visit to
Paris. Despite my habitual “one-and-out”
judgmentalism, I am giving Paree
another chance.
Hopefully, by now, they have worked out that “fermee-at-lunchtime” restaurant
foolishness.
By the way, the acting troupe that played internal organs? I never saw them again.
By the way, the acting troupe that played internal organs? I never saw them again.
2 comments:
Well, you had a better time there than I ever did. Mind you I've only been there for work, and the last thing you need after a hard day's work, is getting served by a waiters who are shocked and appalled that you're expecting to be served food in a restaurant. Then there's the shop assistants who deeply resent you coming into their shops and trying to buy stuff. And the locals who react to being asked directions as if you've asked if you can sleep with their wives. And that's not just Johnny Brit who says that, every French person outside Paris says it.
But maybe I should go back on holiday - you probably gave off a more chilled-out vibe than I did.
Nice article, thanks for the information.
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