In Love and in Paris – Special Places To Share

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In Love and in Paris –  Special Places To Share
Paris is the city for lovers. If you are lucky enough to have someone special to share her with – whether the two of you are new or you have lasted past your youth and the adulthood of your children – and if you have just met my love, the lady Paris, let me take you by the hands and lead you to the places in La Belle Ville where I would take my special person, if I had one. The City herself – all of her: Before taking you to specific places, let me first introduce you to the city herself – a city of beauty, history, art and emotion. Her old, narrow cobbled streets in the Fifth and Sixth Arrondissements, the Marais, Ile St. Louis, Montmarte and Ile de La Cite are perfect for walking slowly together, finding a solitary bench or quiet park to share; her churches reach up with joy and intense emotion into a blue sky ; her bridges cross a river that is sun spackled in the day, lit by stars and passing boats at night, and flanked by uncrowded below street-level walkways where couples can sit together and listen to the quiet lapping water or look up to a skyline that has not changed for centuries ; her parks and gardens are filled with quiet and wonderful corners in which to cuddle, and places to drink wonderful wine and breathe in the air of nature; and her two most famous cemeteries, Pere LaChaise and Montparnasse are landscaped and beautiful strolling grounds for lovers and final homes for famous historical lovers – some of whom are even buried together. Yes, all of Paris is a place to be with someone you love, and I simply cannot choose the “best” places to go. However, let me list below just a few that are particularly special to me: Le Pont Des Arts.: Carrie Bradshaw (Of Sex and the City ) spent the series looking for a “ridiculous, inconvenient, consuming, can’t live without each other love” . She finally found it when her “Mr. Big” followed her to Paris and announced, at long last, that she “was the one” while he protected her from the cold by enfolding her in his jacket and arms and covered her face with soft kisses as she leaned against the west rail of the Pont Des Arts and the Institut de France shone behind them in the night sky. No wonder this bridge, exclusively for pedestrians (with benches for sitting and wonderful views of the river and the Louvre) , is a meeting place for artists and lovers. Its northern entrance is just across from the eastern end of the Louvre. The Streets and Parks: Take each others hands and spend some time doing nothing special – just being together in this wonderful city: (i) try just walking around in the streets surrounding the Pantheon in the fifth; (ii) Walk around the streets of Iles St. Louis, gaze out at the water and look at the wonderful architecture, buy him or her something special in one of the shops, and then stop for a Berthillon ice cream , (iii)take a metro to the Sacre Coeur church at the top of Montmarte, hug each other closely while looking at the view of all of Paris from on high, walk behind the church and across Place de Tertre (you can stop and have portraits done for each other in pastel chalks by one of the many artists), and then stroll slowly down the winding streets behind Place de Tertre back to the bottom of the hill, stopping first for a meal and a wine at one of the cafes; (iv) Sit by the oldest tree in Paris in the tiny park Square Rene Viviani next to St. Julien le Pauvre church (23 Quai de Montebello) and admire the spires of Notre Dame just across the river; (v) Walk through the Luxembourg Gardens in the sixth arrondissement, stop at the Medicis Fountain (gaze at the carved stone depicting the story of the abduction of Leda by the Swan – and know that it was here where De Beauvoir and Sartre had their first rendezvous when they were students), skip some stones into one of the beautiful ponds, and stop at an outside table at one of the little restaurants to drink some champagne, feel the breeze in your hair, and look into each others eyes; (vi) climb down the stairs to the Seine just across the plaza in front of Notre Dame (just west of the church) and sit or walk beside the water – this place is particularly nice at night; (vii) come back to Notre Dame just before sunrise and watch the sky lighten to the east while the two of you stand at the east end of the bridge and then stop at Café Panis just across the river for a morning coffee alone together before anyone else shows up. Pere LaChaise and Montparnasse Cemetaries: In the early 12th century, 17 year old Heloise (niece of a church canon named Fulmer) and the famous 39 year old philosopher Pierre Abelard, hired to tutor her, fell in love and met secretly for almost two years, even making love once in a church refectory. She became a nun – in charge of a convent in the Champagne region. After a 15 year separation, they reconnected in a now famous 8 letter correspondence. Within the last 20 years, a stash of 113 of their earlier letters (written during the affair) was found – letters very personal and sexy. Their final joint resting place is in Pere LaChaise Cemetary. During the 20th century, the famous writers Simone de Beauvoir (author of “The Second Sex” and numerous other books) and Jean Paul Sartre (a founder of the existentialist movement), shared a friendship and a love (not always monogomous) for a half century. They edited each others books, argued, wrote, drank and ate together in cafes in the Sixth Arrondissement (including Café…
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Michele is a corporate lawyer and writer who visits France often and is convinced she must have been French in an earlier life -probably hanging around with Ernest Hemingway during what she calls his "cute" stage, living on Cardinal Lemoine and writing on rue Descartes - which just happens to be be her usual stomping ground. From her first time in Paris and that first feeling of familiarity she has returned often as if it is her second home. Now the hotels are Airbnb apartments and she enjoys being a short-term local and shopping at the market, cooking her own meals. Sitting on her own Paris balcony , a wineglass or morning coffee in hand, she writes her journal, describing her walks around town as the proverbial flâneur and taking notes for the future’s stories and travel pieces.