Sunday, May 2, 2010

Old and New Friends

Dinner last night with Rob's friend Florent was a delight. He still lives in the same apartment on Rue St Denis he had as a student 20 years ago, but it has been greatly improved. According to both Rob and Florent, it was a bit of a pig sty way back when. But Florent is married with two small children now, so it has to be a bit more liveable! It is a work in progress, much like all the places we live. (I would tell you there names, but other than the four years old - Ronan - I have no idea how to spell anything. Will work on that and try to report later.)
I discovered that I do not have the vocabulary to follow the random conversations of a four years old! Florent's son and I played with play dough after dinner, but I could not understand what he was saying most of the time. Our evening was an interesting mix of English and French. Florent's wife speaks some English while he is quite fluent.

We will try to stop in the town in which Florent works on Tuesday on our way back from Versailles.  They make custom upgrades, etc for race cars for people all over the world, hence his fluency in English; he says bad English is the universal language. Rob is eager to see the business.

We got up early this morning despite our late night; we managed to make it up the Eiffel Tower this morning and only had to stand in line for a few minutes. We took the stairs to the first and second platforms and enjoyed learning about the construction of the tower. New elevators are being put in - they are using the original compressed water technology of the first elevator installation. We did not make it to the top platform - you had to stand in line for a second ticket, then stand in line to ride an elevator and then ride the crowded elevator with the masses of other people. We moved on to the next sight instead.


There was a Jewish celebration and parade of some sort going on in the middle of the gardens leading up to the Eiffel Tower, so we got to enjoy our time there to the rhythms of the klezmer band. Rob kept threatening to dance.

We grabbed sandwiches on the way to the Musee Rodin and picnicked on a bench. The museum happened to be free today, so it was a little crowded, but still enjoyable. Many of the sculptures are outside in the garden. The garden is full of blooming flowers and we got to enjoy a springtime rain while hiding under a densely leafed tree. It even hailed!

In fact, in rained on and off most of the day. One minute it was sunny and warm and the next the wind would pick up and bring in the clouds and a shower.  We would just duck under something or just walk through it if it did start to rain.

After the Musee Rodin, we headed over to Ile de la Cite and Saint Chapelle, with a stop at the gardin at the west end of the island. We had an ice cream and waited out another rain shower under a big chesnut tree. 

Saint Chapelle is one of my favorite sights in Paris. It is smaller than some of the other churches, so it is on a much more human scale. I love the painted walls and the stained glass windows. We also visited Le Concierge, which neither of us had been to. It is below street level now, but was once the level of the island. Embankments have been added over time, raising the level of the street considerably. The age of both is just amazing and sometimes hard to wrap your head around. They are both part of the Palais de Justice now, which is on the site of earlier residences of the kings.


We then walked over to Notre Dame de Paris, but the line was really long again. We decided to head back to Montmartre to the apartment, but got waylaid by the entrance to La Crypte de Archeologique. We took a quick pass through. It is an excavation of foundations and lower parts of houses and other buildings that lie below the level of the current street near Notre Dame. It was fascinating. Some of the later buildings used stones from the earlier buildings. We would have like to have spent more time, but they closed about 40 minutes after we got there.

We finally headed for home on a different subway line from our normal route. We got waylaid again by a church, Saint Jean de Montmartre, in the square where our regular metro stop is. The doors were open and we both made a beeline for the church without even talking about it.

It was built in the very late 1800s and was one of the earliest concrete buildings. It's construction - like many buildings in Paris - was very controversial at the time. It even involved the builder going to court to finish it because it was claimed he did not have the proper papers; red tape would get you even back then!

It too is very beautiful and much smaller. I might even be persuaded to go to church every once in a while if I could just sit and look around the whole time. It has some wall paintings, which were never finished due to loss of financing (sound familiar?) and is fairly dark but something about it really appeals to me.

Then we hit a few stores to get supplies to make dinner and got to cooking. Rob made a version of his pasta called Spaghetti Robert Montmartre. Very good, but, of course, a bit spicey!

We followed up dinner with dessert and coffee at a cafe a little off the beaten track just up from the apartment. There was a big, beautiful wisteria vine covering the outdoor seating area. Rob had a warm, gooey chocolate cake thing with caramel ice cream and I had a tarte tartin with creme fraiche-sort of a not very sweet apple pie without a top crust. Both were delicious!

Now we are ready to go to bed so we can get up bright and early and try for the Louvre again tomorrow.

1 comment:

  1. I'm not having luck getting these comments to post. Just wanted to say how great it was for you to see Florent. Hope he's doing well. Brings back memories from younger days...

    ReplyDelete