Thursday, 15 November 2007

This is Paris..

This past weekend I had the opportunity to visit Paris and she did not disappoint. I have come away enchanted and enamoured, once more. I have always thought of Paris as the lover that I was slightly unworthy of touching and so I ignored her beauty, preferring instead to wax lyrical about my current life in London or my previous lives in Massachusetts, or New Mexico, my childhood home. I know that after three visits that suppressing your desire for Paris is like holding your breath indefinitely: it cannot be done.

Paris does not have the finest restaurants in the world, unless you are in the know. I believe that most in the centre of Paris are overpriced and lacking in culinary imagination – I’ve had more value for money from Pizza Express in East Dulwich. However, even in the most average of brasseries along the banks of the Seine, there is a feeling that you are stepping into a timeless culture of civility, intelligentsia and decorum, and I certainly believe that ambience overrules food, in this instance.

People watching opportunities abound and the cafés encourage it – facing the outdoor chairs to the pavement. There is intensity in the Gallic body language, which infected our party of American ex-pats; after two bottles of Pinot Blanc and another bottle of dry white, we discussed even the most trivial issues with fervour. Legs crossed, elbows on tables holding imaginary cigarettes and sipping cups of coffee and snifters of grappa, we only lacked berets (except Chanson who very wisely brought hers) and polo neck sweaters. We joined the leagues of world travellers who, momentarily, believed they were part of the French Revolution, the egalitarian dreams of Socialism, Marxism and the Republic, and the joie de vivre of inhabiting such a vibrant city with its natives, even for a few short days.

With the construction of faster rails in the UK and the opening of St Pancras station as Eurostar's new London home, the train ride from the UK to Paris Gare du Nord has been cut to just over two hours, which, as I heard on the radio the other morning, means that it is quicker to ride to Paris than it is to the north of England. I will not wait as long to visit her next time, and I hope that she will let me love her a bit more.

This is Paris, and she is a lady. She is savvy, well-dressed, discrete, and smart. She was everything beautiful last weekend. Any flaws she has only perfect her. I am in love again.

6 comments:

C. L. Hanson said...

Of course I wore my beret!!! If I'd been thinking, I would have brought one for each of you. ;^)

What a fantastic trip, huh? It was great meeting you in person!!! :D

Sister Mary Lisa said...

Well, Aitch, the final night that you left, we ate at the restaurant on the opposite corner across from the hotel (same side of the street on the other end of Le Zimmer) ~ Northern African cuisine and it was exquisite. I'm sorry you missed it. Wonderful food.

:) It was great getting to know you. You are awesome. I fell in love with Paris as well.

hm-uk said...

chanson - bless you, you looked marvellous in your beret, tres chic! It was great to meet you, too.

SML - Alas my friend, I love North African cuisine, I'm happy to hear that you struck gold after Zimmer risotto...I hope it didn't sound like I was gritching at the food - I only meant that one could eat le dog poopie in Paris and it would still be divine because one was in Paree!

Sister Mary Lisa said...

Le dog poopie!! OMG. Warn me not to drink just before reading your humor!! Sheesh. Now I gotta go see if this pepsi will come out of my shirt.

:)

Anonymous said...

What a very lovely post, Aitch. I am not in love with Ms Paris yet, but I do have some lust toward her.

So wonderful to meet you.

hm-uk said...

Wry,

A healthy dose of lust is a good thing to have, yea, even sayeth me. It was truly brilliant to meet you, as well.

Aitchxx