C’est la Vie:
Paris
June, 2014.
1. En route
Raindrops pelt
oblong, heavy-duty plastic
economy class
windows, teaming with
wind, thunder
and lightning to cause
a flight delay
of nearly two hours.
United’s 400,000
pound Boeing 777,
more brutish
than sleek, waits loaded on the
tarmac, shut
down by weather and runway traffic.
As the delay
wears on, small plastic cups
of lukewarm
water are distributed by the
nearly all-female
crew of flight attendants.
The plum Paris run requires
seniority;
the stewardesses tend to be mature,
married, and disinclined
to put ice
in warm cups of
water.
Once airborne
above weather’s bumps and grinds,
cocktails are
purchased, payable by credit card.
Cash is not acceptable
so attendants don’t
have to make
change. Canadian Club
comes in a
plastic cup filled with ice
and a custom
imprinted swizzle stick, scarce
nowadays even at
the finest of saloons.
The Tourist once
had a swizzle stick collection
from such as
Sardi’s, Jack and Charley’s “21”,
Jack Dempsey’s, Toots
Shor’s, selling the plastic sticks
to a collector who
had to be reminded
payment was
required.
“Oh,” he would
say, “I’m sorry. I forgot.
I have the
cancer. I have the cancer in my head.”
Eventually a
check was mailed, and it cleared.
2. In Paris
By Parisian
standards the apartment is neither large nor small. Floor-planned like a
diminutive loft, the living area has a sofa bed, large flat-screen TV, coffee
table, several pots of live flowers, and a glass-top breakfast table
accommodating two. An obligatory painting of the Tour Eiffel, vintage Citroen
parked at its base, hangs above the table and a counter divides the living and
kitchen areas. A short hall leads to the bath—shower, no tub—and front door.
A balcony just
off the loft area accommodates two chairs and a table large enough for a cheese
plate, a bottle of wine and an ice bucket. The balcony terrace is separated
from thin air by a three-foot wall with a railing along the top. Falling or
jumping would be possible but not without reflection. Leaving the sliding glass
door to the terrace open for fresh air, a black bee slightly larger than a
well-fed fly soundlessly zigzags its aerodynamically impossible body from a
flower pot to the kitchen where The Tourist loses track of its flight. It is
never seen again.
3. Raining near the Louvre
Impressive, a
round umbrella
spanning one-and-a-half
people
as shelter from
pattering rain.
And red! Not
bright red, but red
with deep
scalloped edges arched
like tunnels and
tines arcing
to the apex of
the tunnels.
It oozes élan
with its circumference,
red covering, ebony
shaft
and highly-grained
wood handle.
Sidewalk
passersby make do with small
fold-up black
polyester umbrellas,
some with prints
of ducks or fish;
a few hold a
soggy newspaper overhead.
Hoodies are
raised and tied.
In a jostling
crowd the red nylon disc
is safe harbor,
keeping things
as they are not.
4. The reunion
His niece, not
seen in many years, wants
to meet,
traveling from London to Paris
under the
channel by high speed train for a
one night
reunion, arriving early enough for
a stroll along
Boulevard St.-Germaine shops.
They stop at a
renowned patisserie and have,
for the first
time, a macaroon: hers chocolate,
his fraise, and
they are disappointed.
The
circumference of a quarter
(though they
come in several sizes) and thick
as several euros
stacked atop one another,
the confection
consists of a crackly fondant
shell and a
flavored soft center inside
bready layers. Gone
in a crunch or two, a trifle,
macaroons will
not replace beignets.
A glass of wine
at Le Café de Flore
will reverse the
aversion for The Tourist
while his
visitor window-shops the boulevard.
They will meet
later at his first arrondissement
apartment near
the Bourse.
As he enters the
apartment his niece is in
the middle of a
tryst with the young man
who hours ago
politely served macaroons,
effetely using
silver tongs and lace napkins.
Seeing his tawny
body between the pasty
English-pink
legs of his niece, The Tourist
realizes the
young man to be less feminine
than he
appeared. They slow but don’t stop
as apologies are
made for his stealth
and he exits, to
return in a few hours,
pondering
whether to get her a separate room
for the night
for two reasons:
1). To rid his
mind of the image of her grasping
pale legs, and
2) Ah, well, there is no second reason.
5. Au courant Couture
Pink, according
to TV fashion channels,
is the color for
this season, replacing
last years rust
orange: blouses, skirts,
pants, men’s
trousers, umbrellas…everything,
everything was rust or Fanta-orange
but so far pink
has not been evident,
especially in
men’s pants.
Flouncy is also haut
couture: loose, flowing,
light and
translucent to allow sun
to backlight the
body’s figure,
but, again, not
for menswear.
6.
Sunday church bells
peal, bells as ancient as their centuries-old housing. It’s an old sound, a
frail clang not authoritative as is usually heard from Sunday bells.
Across the rue a
twelve story crane rests, horizontal arm still, not even nudged along by winds
as has been the case previous days. Occasionally a high-flying bird alights,
flutters then flies off. The crane is huge: a yellow/orange skeletal stalk
rising well above The Tourist’s balcony eye-level. Its arm is painted red, an
alert for daydreaming pigeons, and is the length of a city block. Both the
crane and its project are out of place among the old first arrondissement
district but no more so than the Ivo Pei glass house pyramid in the Louvre
courtyard, a five minute walk from crane to Mona Lisa.
So a new
building is going up on ancient rue Bouloi, sleek and clean but to be topped by
traditional red clay-colored rooftop chimney stacks.
7.
Situated in one
of those narrow old passages where trucks and vans block traffic unloading goods
during morning rounds, the small—capacity twenty—restaurant, identified by a one-word
red neon sign, has acquired the patina of age without charm. Still early for
dinner, the restaurant is empty of customers except for the The Tourist until
another man enters—white hair, gray glasses and a red face wearing a suit jacket
and mismatched trousers too heavy for the season—and sits at the adjacent
table. A friend of the waiter, they converse at length, in French, of daily
matters. Once his meal arrives the man becomes quiet, sometimes whistling to
himself; sometimes humming as he eats and works on a crossword puzzle, stealing
an occasional furtive glance at The Tourist or having a word or two with the
waiter. The only other sound is piped-in classical American rock music, fifties
through the eighties. Given a complimentary dish of ice cream for dessert the man
eats it all, scraping the sides of the dish with his spoon, which he licks
front and back, leaving without a word to The Tourist but bumping his table on
the way out.
8. Footsteps on the ceiling
Noted when half
asleep, the sound seems
like footsteps
in the air but no,
just steps from
the above apartment
magnified by hardwood
flooring
and night
stillness.
There seems to
be a pattern to the
footsteps:
feminine though with
shoes of solid
heels and soles; not slippers.
Late at night, footsteps
are
the only sound
in the building
and are easily,
off-handedly, followed
on The Tourist’s
under-side of the ceiling:
Here, there,
finally to bed, the sound of a
woman as she
walks alone.
Curiosity has
The Tourist noting the time
she leaves for
work but it would be creepy
to dash to the elevator
as she descends.
It develops that
the tenant is a female
in her late
thirties or well-kept forties
who speaks no
English but appreciates
the elevator
door held for her as she exits.
Merci, monsieur.
9. Watch your step
Yes, there is
the occasional bit of dog shit
on Parisian
streets as dogs, chiens,
travel the rues,
as welcome in restaurants
as a VISA Black card.
It’s a trade-off:
Casting eyes
downward some see chien feces;
others see fine
legs jacked-up by the latest
French fashion stiletto
shoes.
For every
reminder that the occasional canine has
an owner unwilling
to clean up for him
or is a
companion of a street person
unable to do so,
there are 10,000 shapely,
groomed and fit sets
of female legs unadorned
by anything other
than the sheen and coloring
brought about by
a high Paris
sun,
barely covered
by stylish-again mini-mini’s.
10.
Work continues
on the construction project
across the rue
from The Tourist’s apartment,
five hardhat
workers including a female
cutting, sawing,
hammering, pounding.
In an age of
computerized cranes and digital
blueprints it is
nostalgic to see a
tape measure
pulled from a back pocket:
“Measure twice,
cut once.”
11. World Cup 2014
Her face: one
side is bright, almost white from
bright lights; the
left half is dark, eclipsed.
Wearing only a Cameroon
2014 World Cup
Football tee
shirt and shaking through a
Josephine Baker-inspired
reggae dance
on the rue
Rivoli, the African attracts an
enthusiastic crowd
of midnight revelers.
Cameroon fans blow soccer horns;
some toss her a
few euros.
Scott and Zelda
would have jumped in a fountain.
12.
The tenant in
the upstairs apartment is active
this night,
re-arranging sparse furniture
here, then there,
then back again making
jigsaw pieces
fit regardless. She seems in no
hurry, but this
is speculation.
13.
Sitting, waiting
for his meal to be served, The Tourist notes nothing special about the restaurant,
a pizza specialist common to the area.
The facing table, a four-top, has two girls in their early twenties and
a man-child of about the same age. The girls speak non-stop French throughout
their meal, usually with food in their mouth; sharing a decanter of white table wine, the
girls’ voices rise and their cheeks flush. The male companion sits quietly,
listening but seemingly oblivious which was just as well because he is totally
ignored, treated as though a brother. His face is inches from his plate, and if
his hair were as long as his table-mates it would have been swirled on his fork
like a ball of spaghetti. As it is, his hair is innocuously short. In fact, the
only thing of any curiosity about him is a heavy chrome-plated wristwatch with
a dark leather band about three inches wide. Digital, it eliminates the need to
differentiate between the big hand and the little hand.
The Tourist’s
table is jammed between a wall and a table for two occupied by businessmen wearing
crisp white shirts, solid ties and black suit coats, table manners precise and
meticulous. Getting up from the table is problematical for The Tourist,
allowing him to rationalize two additional glasses of chardonnay while watching the girls eat and chew and
drink wine.
14.
Like a yoyo in quarter
time, the crane hefts
pre-fab building
components to
the unfinished
upper level then lowers
no longer needed
pallets and equipment.
Wiping a sweaty
brow, the lone female
removes her
hardhat to allow her ponytail
to fall between
her shoulders.
15.
Stylish she is,
with an English accent,
recently colored
and coiffed hair and five rings
on her left
hand, each of them gold or gilt,
three of which
are set with semi-precious stones:
amethysts, garnets,
citrines.
The most
prominent of the rings,
on her middle
finger, is set with a circle
of quartz chips
which catch The Tourist’s eye
as she waves her
hand about,
signaling the
waiter, making a point.
A large onyx adorns
her right hand,
her necklace is
of pearls with half-inch
silver spacers. As
she speaks, the words
are also
semi-precious, referring to the server
as “that guy.” Another
Chablis? she is asked
and responds
“Yeah, I’ll have another glass,”
looking at him
as though he were
trying to pad
the check.
A lack of savoir faire is reflected by the fact
that she didn’t
try to flirt with—in fact, ignored—
any male in her
line of vision,
including The
Tourist.
16.
Germaine Hillaire Edgar Degas (nee de Gas), the
impressionist master of break-through paintings of ballerinas, racehorses and
laundry women, reposes in Cemetaire Montmartre in an unkept crypt on Montebello
path. It is one of the very few such tombs that hold open house; the door is
unlocked, ajar, and entry seemingly encouraged. Inside the small foyer there is
a ledge on which drawings and other sentiments have been left, homage to the
Great One. There are also dried leaves about, mixed with common debris that
seem to be several seasons a-laying. There is no effort on the part of the
cemetery to highlight the site, nor to sweep it out, although the front door of
the tomb bears a facial likeness of Degas, not as yet vandalized.
It is a short
walk from the cemetery to 6, rue de Clichy, a narrow apartment building where Degas
spent the final years of his life, a fact commemorated by a plaque above the
front door and by an upper level window-box of flowers. Clichy is a commercial street and Degas’ Pigalle-area
home is bordered by tawdry businesses of a common type he would have considered
apt subject matter had they existed at the time and had he by then not been
totally blind.
17. Dozing at the d’Orsay
Waking with a
start, the museum guard
looks about:
everything in place,
no bare spots on
the walls,
no missing
masterpieces.
The room is
overheated,
there are few
mid-week visitors.
His chin again droops
to his chest,
red jacket straining
its gold buttons
as he squirms to
a comfortable position
on the plastic
chair. By closing time
he will be well
rested, and then what?
—an evening of chahut at the Crazy Horse.
18. Let them eat cake
Not a shock, but
the Conciergerie,
built to be a
royal residence along
the Left Bank of
the Seine but in essence
the jailhouse in
which Marie Antoinette
was retained for
months waiting to be
guillotined, has
morphed into more of a
schlock touristy
destination than a
shrine to the
out-of-touch king’s wife.
Her cell is not
her reality cell but a likeness
with modified
replacement furniture
and a black-shrouded
mannequin
—its back turned
to the gawkers—
representing M.
Antoinette.
Two gendarme
dummies stand guard 24/7.
19.
Heading west
along the Seine’s
Right
Bank, the #69
bus crosses at the
Pont du
Carrousel to the Left Bank,
navigating
narrow rues built for horse
and carriage,
not double-bodied busses,
dropping The
Tourist at Auguste Rodin’s former
home and studio,
now a museum and gardens.
There are
paintings to be seen on the
museum’s walls
along with other artifacts,
but the
attraction is the statuary
throughout the
gardens, chopped, hacked
and chiseled
from marble blocks by Rodin
and his
assistants.
The still, smooth
white bodies—most with all
of their body
parts intact—are frozen
in various
configurations; holding, kissing, loving,
dancing and thinking,
all taking place in front
of Rodin’s
masterwork, The Gates Of Hell.
With the sun
still high, the #69 returns
The Tourist to
St.-Germaine for drinks at
Les Deux Magots,
opening personal gates to hell.
20.
Another layer
has been added to the building project facing The Tourist’s apartment. Pre-fab reinforced
concrete wall slabs have been hoisted by the crane, secured by the construction
crew. Earlier in the morning there had been shouting followed by the sing-song
(SING-song, SING-song) sirens of emergency vehicles but they flashed past the work
site and the shouting soon faded, replaced by workday routine. Windows haven’t
yet been added but it will require a miracle of design to convert the Saltine
box look of the construction into anything more than an example of twenty-first
century Bauhaus.
21.
Along Boulevard
de Clichy in the midst of
Pigalle strip
clubs, do-it-yourself
sex shops,
hookers and hustlers
there is an old
merry-go-round,
wooden horses of
the 19th century,
where for a few
euros fauve-inspired
painted equines gallop
about, creating
wind in the face
breeze, and heard above
the wind, Fellini-esque
calliope music
suggests guilty
pleasures.
There is no
longer a brass ring to grasp;
too many
children and drunks fell off
their oak mount
trying to snag the ring,
good for a free
ride. The merry-go-round
offers
horizontal circles which cease
only when the
music ends.
For the price of
a glass of house table wine,
peeling-paint
wooden horses
and tired circus
clown music
offer escape and
fantasy,
if not a brass
ring.
Love these Paris sequences....wish Gene would have also sent scans of his lovely paintings to accompany each vignette! But perhaps these will eventually be published in an illustrated book? (hint, hint....)
ReplyDeleteI think I see a chapbook in here, for sure. And as cool as Gene's paintings are, his words paint pictures as clear as any picture. Great stuff!
ReplyDelete