February 14, 2011

Leaving for Paris Part Two

25 December 2010 – Part Two




Les escaliers de la butte sont durs aux misereux
Les ailes du moulin protegent les amoureux -- La Complainte De La Butte


In the last post I finished with a stroll past the many sex shops. Once back on the coach, however, the day took a more spiritual turn. After a fifteen minute drive, we were back in the heart of Paris, at looking up at Notre Dame.
Notre Dame is not as imposing as Westminster, but it is incredibly grand. There is a magnificence to it, because of the history (Napoleon used it as a weapons store) the architecture (rose window) and because of the service going on as we were walking through. It was beautiful to listen to a Christmas service in French, and to hear the last hymn sung in the language. I wish now, with the benefit of hindsight, there had been more time to actually sit in a service and participate.


The building itself was really crowded, both with site seers and worshipers but it did not feel wrong. The smell of incense, the quiet hush that still draped over the visitors, the side chapels for private devotions, the art work, the parents humming along with the hymns to the children they carried. I want to go back to Notre Dame one day.

Rose Window



Ossuary with engraved thigh bone
Outside Notre Dame there was a guy in a tatty old suit with cake. He’d peel off a small portion, put it in his mouth and then let the little sparrows come and take it from him. He would flap his arms every so often to get rid of the pigeons that also wanted to play.

There was a girl, not from our tour, who, feeling adventurous, wanted to have a go as well. She did well up until the pigeons started to try and land.

I also tried my first roasted chestnut. Can’t say I really liked them all that much. They’re a strange taste. Kind of like sweet popcorn but not.


After the visit to Notre Dame we were to go on a boat cruise along the Seine. The rough weather the day before, the same which had affected our channel crossing, had flooded the river, and the boat we were to take could no longer fit under the bridges. Instead, we were given the option of going back into central Paris to shop or to be dropped off at the Eiffel Tower to go up and see the view. My Chicagoan family and I chose to go up the Eiffel Tower. Merytl and I waited to take the lift to the viewing platform. The queue took about two hours to reach the booth, and then another half hour to get in the lift. The view from the top though was incredibly worth it.  The height of the building made it incredibly cold. We were nearly solid by the time we came back down.

First level of the Eiffel Tower








After we’d climbed the Tower Merytl and I wandered the Seine and made our way back to one of the Tube stations we new would take us back to Bercy without to many problems.

On the walk we watched one guy, setting up his camera on the bank of the Seine. As we watched a little boat came past, creating a wake, and it splashed up over his legs, up to his knees. He had to make a mad dash to grab his camera gear so that it didn’t end up in the river.










Mertyl and I walked past the flame statue that is supposed to commemorate Princess Diana. We didn’t realise what it was at the time and I didn’t take a photo of it.

That night we went to a little French restaurant for Christmas dinner. I had aubergine & feta something, roast duck and some fancy potatoes, and rum pudding with ice cream. Complementary champagne and a bottle of Bordeaux were also the order of the night. It was lovely.


Ronnie (R) and Shannon (L)


When we got back to the hotel, it was still relatively early, so I went on the internet and played for a while.

26 December 2010


We had the morning free today. Originally I had thought I might be able to catch up with a friend from New York, Jackie. Unfortunately, by the time I was able to find out what the tour was doing, and where we were heading for that and at what time there was no time left. Jackie had her own exciting news from that day anyway.


The Chicagoans and I caught the tube into the main area of the city and got off at the tube station Champs Elysee Clemenceau. So many posh shops. So many people selling dodgy crap. We walked past a Swarovski shop, and I sneakily took a photo of the stairs, as each rise is decorated with goodness only knows how many.


Swarovski Stairs






We walked up to the Arc de Triomphe with the intention of climbing to the top but it was closed because of maintenance being needed on the roof. Apparently it was unsafe after all the ice. Given the experience on the Eiffel Tower, we didn’t want to be slipping over.

Thwarted in our attempt we got the tube to another area of Paris and went for a wander. We stopped at a little café for brunch and then walked down to the Hotel de Ville. This was our stop for the afternoon trip to Versailles. Ronnie and Shannon by this point were freezing cold, so they found a sunny spot and waited out the remaining time. Mertyl and I decided to walk towards the Bastille and see what we could find. The architecture is amazing. What makes it even more so, is that most of it was designed after the French Revolution made famous by Les Mis. They widened all the boulevards so that they could not be barricaded by any form of resistance.


We found a large church in one side street. It looked like it might still be used, but was mainly for private worship. Some of the murals were incredibly beautiful.




At 1330 the coach arrived and we all filed on board. About half the tour was going out to Versailles. The journey only took about 20 or so minutes. Andrew (the tour guide) pointed out the sister to the Statue of Liberty and the many plinths to commemorate the different battles and revolutions.

Versailles itself is a marvel. It’s a grand structure, it’s covered in gold gilt and there was snow everywhere. There was also a lot of ice, which meant a lot of impromptu sliding. One elderly chap, probably at least 80+ went over and landed on his backside. It took three people to get him on his feet and away from the ice. I think he was amused, he looked like he was grinning.








Inside the palace the place is stifling. They allow so many people through it must boarder on dangerous. There were nearly a dozen buses in the parking lot when we arrived. The majority of the visitors seemed to be Asian, they all had little ear pieces and were milling around listening to the translation being done for their tour guide. There were so many people trying to get into the rooms, you could barely look to see what was there.

Most of the rooms looked like this


Little creature on the wall

The hall of mirrors was amazing. So many chandeliers, and I can’t remember how many mirrors on the wall. Everyone, myself included, seemed to be trying for the vanity shot of themselves in the mirror.


The obligatory self portrait
I was probably inside for about an hour and a half, after which I had to get out. So many people, the heat, lack of fresh air was starting to make me feel quite unwell. I stood in the open, on the snow for about a half hour before I felt cold enough to put a jacket back on.

My feelings, having come out of Versailles, is I would have been on the side of the revolution. The pomp, and arrogance, and splendour of the palace is beyond even what I saw at Buckingham Palace. I realise the palace was also used as a reception area, to show visiting monarchs etc how important they were, but I can also see how this would have been taken as a slap in the face for the people who didn’t have enough to eat.

Dinner tonight was pasta at a little Italian place just down the road from the hotel. Tried foie gras for the first time. Yes, I know what it is. No, I wouldn’t buy it again. Yes, it was damn delicious!

27 December 2010

Finally made it to the Louvre today. Wow! What a sight!!
The infamous glass pyramid

And the reverse

Once we finally had our tickets, we all made a mad dash for the things we wanted to see. I headed straight for the Caravaggio and wasn’t disappointed.


After seeing these I figured no trip to the Louvre is complete without seeing the Mona Lisa. I was lucky on this. I got caught up in a wave of movement towards the painting, had enough time to get an okay photo, and then the wave moved out again and I was swept away from her.


There was a painting of another lady in the same room. I don’t remember who she was, but she was incredibly beautiful.


Wooden sculpture

Birth of Venus

Wooden sculpture

Wooden sculpture


After our time at the Louvre we made our way back to the coach, and drove back towards Calais and the ferry.  I arrived back in London around 11pm.

3 comments:

  1. foie gras - what is it? Hey this is wonderful writing Brooke - have you offered it to the courier mail yet for their travel segment? They'd be mad not to publish. I have always thought - we could never afford to do that - but now I think, what is life without seeing these places.

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  2. Stolen from Wikipedia ... "Foie gras is a food product made of the liver of a duck or goose that has been specially fattened."

    It's inhumane the way the animals are treated as they're force fed to make them incredibly fat and then killed. This is why I have issues with it. Just didn't realise how tasty it was.

    As for submitting for publication. That's something to think about. I considered it once, but didn't really think it would be that interesting for anyone.

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  3. I've never seen a wooden sculpture! The are lovely, and resonate with so much warmth and feeling in your pictures. The wood grain in the first one especially makes it look like he is crying.

    The opulence of Versailles just makes me feel sad. We are capable of so much beautiful horror.

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