Sunday, October 14, 2012

The Great Escape - October 2012


View from our Rome Flat on the Inner Courtyard

We are escaping the election noise again!  Voted as "walk-ins" on October 8 before LEAVING THE COUNTRY!  Our trip is to Rome for 4 nights then two back to back cruises.  The first is Rome to Rome and the second is Rome to Fort Lauderdale - both on the Noordam. 

The flights to Rome did not start off well.  We sat at the gate in San Diego - seated and ready to take off - for an hour and twenty minutes due to "weather" in San Francisco.  Having lived in the Bay Area, we know that "weather" at SFO can mean anything from  dense fog to four drops of rain.   When we arrived a little over an hour late, it was sunny and beautiful so "who knows?"   Our first bit of luck was that our gate was directly adjacent to the walkway to the International Terminal - PLUS - I had purposely booked our next flight with over two hours of leeway. 

The next flight was a non-stop to Frankfurt on a 747.  This flight left 45 minutes late but our arrival in Frankfurt was on time - again proving the airlines have lots of "fudge factor" in their schedules.  Our second stroke of good luck was that we both had empty seats next to us on the SFO to FRA flight. United's Economy Plus is also a big help - the extra few inches of leg space makes a lot of difference - less of a feeling of having been folded into unnatural positions for 12 hours. 

Next was the Lufthansa flight to Rome - the connection in Frankfurt was fairly easy and the flight left on time.  The plane was an Air Bus - but as big a jet as I have seen in a narrow body design - 6 seats across and we were in row 35 with many rows behind us.  I'd guess 275 seats!    Getting luggage in Rome took forever.  The luggage came off in spurts and I was about to go to the lost luggage desk when the woman next to me told me not to worry.  She flies to Rome frequently from Germany and said that they don't usually lose luggage but they are very slow.  She was right!

The price for cabs to Rome is regulagted - 45 Euros.  We  read that an arranged limo is the same price so we had someone waiting for us with a sign - this was great so we did not have to hassle the taxi line after the long day.  Got to our apartment in Rome near the Vatican by 4pm.

The apartment is on the 7th floor with an ancient elevator that goes to the 6th!  The owner grew up in the apartment below where her daughter and husband now live.  Our flat is one floor above - it is smaller but very nice - light, cross ventilation, one bedroom, dining, living room, basic kitchen.  The owner lives in Chester, England with her British husband.  She has been very helpful and easy to deal with on all of the details.

Our neighborhood is near the Vatican - and a few streets from the entrance to the Vatican Museum.  Our street is quiet and without tourist mobs. Being on an inner courtyard, the apartment is very quiet.  50 meters from the door is a grocery store and within a few blocks we have everything from banks to buses to trams to restaurants.  Yesterday we walked around the Piazza Navonna area and were reminded of the chaos that is "tourist" Rome.  We were very happy to return to our quiet neighborhood where it feels like "real" Romans live. 

With jet lag still nipping at our heels, the first day did not start until noon  and that was only because we had tickets for the Borghese Museum from 1 to 3pm.  This museum is not to be missed and due to its size and popularity they only allow a certain number of people in for 2 hours of viewing.  The lines were long even with advance reservations and despite signs telling people that the next available tickets were 4 days away, many people stayed in line and were very disapointed at not getting tickets. Two hours is really not enough time - but we saw most everything if not a little rushed.  The audio guide is excellent. 

Saturday was no different than Friday - slow start - actually a slower start.  Did not leave the flat until 3:30.  Our day was a bus to the Victor Emmanuel Monument, Mussolini's Balcony, the mother church of the Jesuits, the only Gothic Church in Rome built on the ruins of a temple to Minerva, a walk by the Pantheon, and the church to Louis I of France (of course!).  The tourist mobs at the Pantheon were amazing - scores of guides holding up umbrellas guiding their flocks through the square.  Fortunately we have been here before in quiter times so we did not go in. 

We had another wonderful dinner at a wine bar 2 blocks from the apartment recommended by our landlord. 


Bernini Sculpture in front of Church of Santa Maria Sopra Minerva
Today was a walk to St. Peter's, standing in line for an hour to get through metal detectors to enter,  hearing but not seeing the Pope speak from his balcony in St. Peter's square (because we were being screened at the time).  But - Marie-Elisabeth got to mass at St. Peter's.  The service we joined was just behind the main alter directly below the Bernini's Dove Window/Sculpture.  On the way back we stopped for gelato and a drink - almost 20 Euros - of course we chose to sit down at a table! 

Tonight it is packing -  tomorrow we are picked up abougt 10am for our trip to Civitavecchia - the port for Rome where we join the Noordam for our two cruises.  The rest of the itinerary is:

  • Livorno (port for Florence) - we've rented a car to drive to Volterra.
  • Monaco
  • Barcelona
  • Tunis - still don't know if they will cancel this stop?
  • Palermo Sicily
  • Rome  - Civitavecchia - we've rented a car to drive around the countryside north of Rome.
  • Alicante, Spain
  • Malaga, Spain
  • Cadiz, Spain  - have a car for exploring some areas inland of Cadiz.  We've stopped her three times before and have been exploring different areas near the City.
  • Island of Madeira - Portugal
  • Fort Lauderdale
With the slow download speeds on the ship, this may be my one and only post!  Stay tuned!












 

Tuesday, May 29, 2012

Yes - Another Cemetery!



I'm still procrastinating on packing - so I'll write up another adventure. Today we finally got around to going across the street to the Cemetery of Montparnasse. This last resting place for Permanent Parisians is in a beautiful park-like setting with many benches for stopping, reading, or enjoying the weather.  Many people were doing that today!  The cemetery is not as old as Pere Lachaise and it does not have as many famous people - but it is worth visiting.  There are many interesting funerary sculptures - several very modern and a few that are outright strange. I'm going to let the pictures do the talking.

I have NO explanation!
Engraved on the fish is - "He makes his choice of anchovies and  he dines on  a sardine."   I have no idea!  
Jean-Paul Sartre and Simone de Beauvoir
Sartre and de Beauvoir lived just down the street from our apartment on Blvd. Raspail and frequented the cafes of Montparnasse.  The things on the grave are tokens from admirers.  Why there are used bus and metro tickers, I do not know?  You often find these kinds of things on other graves in Paris.  

A not so famous academic but in an interesting sculpture in his library!
Different!
Poet Charles Beaudalaire
Sculptor Henri Laurens' Grave
Sculpture titled Sorrow




St. Denis



On Memorial Day (U.S.) and Lundi de Pentecôte (Day After Pentecost Holiday in France) we took the metro to the city of St. Denis.  This city is one of the suburbs surrounding Paris that has become a largely immigrant community.  However, St. Denis has a history going back to the 400s.  The reason for our visit was to go to the Basilica of St. Denis - the resting place of many French kings and the birth of the Gothic architectural style (1122).  We had not been in many years and the sunny weather (in the 80s) made it a perfect day to get the full impact of the stained glass windows.


The Church has a tumultuous history - especially around the time of the first French Revolution. The Convention called for destruction of  "those mausoleums which recall the terrifying memory of our kings." The "sans-cullotes" descended on St. Denis and destroyed many of the royal graves, piled bones in limestone to speed their disintegration, and melted down the lead coffins for bullets. Gold and silver, relics, and Joan of Arc's sword were taken to Paris and destroyed. Fortunately, one man, Alexandre Lenoir, was given permission to remove some of the mausoleums to Paris for a new museum of French National Monuments.


With the Restoration of the monarchy, Louis the XVIII repaired the damage but the restorers did a horrible job - putting wigs on Crusaders, for example - making the result more humorous than anything.  But the Basilica got a new roof and the ancient stained glass was put back into the frames. The restoration of the mausoleums caused such an uproar that eventually the well-known Neo-Gothic architect Viollet-le-Duc was called in to make things right.

Henri II and Catherine de Medici
In the crypt of the church there are remains of 4th century construction.  The reason for the importance of the site was the burial of St. Denis - the patron saint of Paris.  He was martyred on a hill in Paris (Mont de Martyr which later became known as Montmartre).  The legend is that he picked up his decapitated head and walked to St. Denis and was buried in a Gallo-Roman cemetery.  Early Christians came to the site to worship.  There is a statue of St. Denis holding his head in a park in Montmartre next to a playground!!!

The earliest king buried in the Basilica is Dagobert who died in the 7th Century. Some of the names of Kings/Royalty were of particular interest to us - Philip II The Bold, Philip IV The Good, Philip V The Tall,  Philip VI, Philip of France, Philip son of Louis VI, etc.  No wonder Grand-Mère approved of the name Philip - she loved royalty!  :)

The Basilica (which only became a Cathedral in 1966) is an interesting and easy trip from Paris.  

Sunday, May 27, 2012

OUR Day!

Sunday Lunch
Forty years - wow - where has the time gone! We were married May 27, 1972 at the North Long Beach Methodist Church.

My maternal grandparents were among the founding member of the church in the 1920s.  My mom grew up in the church and later was the church secretary.   She "traded" some of her pay for time on their pipe organ when she was learning to play.  As a kid I was always fascinated how anyone could play on several manuals with the hands and play the pedalboard with the feet - at the same time changing stops on both!  I'm still in awe of anyone who can do this!

For those at St. Paul's Episcopal in San Diego, there is an interesting connection between my mom's birth church and Mark Trotter, our preacher in residence and the retired minister of First Methodist Church in San Diego.  His father was minister of North Long Beach Methodist Church in the 1930s.  Small world!

Enough of history....what did we do today?  We previously decided that our big celebration was the trip to Paris where we were engaged in 1971.  We already celebrated with Philip and Megan, Linda and Bob Thomas and Peggy Stewart/Tom Scott - the four Powegians.  So today was OUR day!.

We went to Notre Dame for the 10am service which uses Gregorian Music in the liturgy.  Being Pentecost, the church was full - with the usual tourists circling on the outside aisles flashing away with their cameras.

Here I go again with history - but - Marie-Elisabeth sang in a Gregorian Choir in High School and went on a pilgrimage with the choir to Rome as part of a movement to save Gregorian Music in the mass.  This was during Pope Paul VI's time - shortly after the death of Pope John XXIII when Vatican II was completing reforms that modernized the church.  We both love Gregorian Music and are always glad to hear it at Notre Dame.  The setting is just right.

After the service, we went to lunch at Les Fines Gueules - very difficult to translate but "The Gourmets" is one but the combination of words is ironic.  "Gueule" is a slang word for mouth but combined with "fines" (fine) it becomes gourmet.  Finding a restaurant open on Sundays is sometimes a problem in Paris.  I found this one on the Food Blog of David Lebovitz that I follow.  He praised their cooking of meats and fish - commenting that they really know how to sear the food to get the best flavors.  He was right!   The food was great.  We had a carafe of rosé from Provence.  Before you faint - French rosé is dry and is nothing like the cloyingly sweet American rosés.  It is a perfect chilled wine for a warm day - and it was very warm today in Paris!  M.E. started with a pea veloute - a cold soup of fresh peas.  I got a taste and it was fabulous. 


First Course!
I  had burrata, buffalo mozarella, and ham.  It was incredible - simple - but the addition of small pieces of chopped almonds, sea salt, and a pour of olive oil hit the mark.  A trend in Paris is only using a few very fresh ingredients rather than complicated recipes with multiple ingredients.  It works.

We both had Dorade (Sea Bream) with "market" vegetables.  The fish was cooked to perfection.  Les Fines Gueules goes on our list of restaurants to repeat!  Again - simple but everything was very fresh and cooked well.

Perfectly cooked Dorade! 

Reading the Menu was not about understanding French but required powers of deduction to decipher the writing!  
Then it was back to the bus and to the apartment.  We spent the rest of the day doing absolutely NOTHING!!!

A Dog's Life


"I'll have the Filet"
Waiting for the bus!
Parisians love their dogs!  They go everywhere - in restaurants, stores, trains, metros, bicycle baskets - dogs are part of life. They are well-behaved - usually more so than their human companions. The ubiquitous "piles" on the street are the result of the two-legged animals being thoughtless!

When Jacques Chirac was Mayor of Paris, he deployed an army of "motto-crottes" - city employees on motor scooters with vacuums to clean up the mess.  More recently Paris Mayors have turned to fines with an army of enforcers - up to 200 Euros.  they "say" this has worked! City Hall recently declared that Paris was "No Longer the Dog Mess Capital of the World!"  Now there's a slogan for a City!  

It may be my imagination but I think the problem is less than in the past.  BUT - watch where you walk in Paris!

Helping at the Cake and Bread stall at the Farmers' Market

METRO DOG!

Helping with the Shopping!

Saturday, May 26, 2012

Last Trip to the Street Market - How sad!

Flower stall at our market.
I have a lot of catching up to do in recording our time in Paris - but I had to post this about our last trip to the market in front of our apartment. This twice a week farmers' market has been a great plus for this apartment location and a big reason we will be coming back. The apartment has a lot going for it but this street market is the icing on the cake -  "c'est la cerise sur le gâteau!"

I'm going to miss tomatoes that taste like tomatoes; our talkative Algerian olive and spice merchant; fresh vegetables and fruit of every description; cheese vendors with too many choices; butchers with everything including charcuterie; and  I cannot forget the baker with our favorite chocolate pear cake - plus this is all at our doorstep.  We rarely make it to the Sunday Market near home in San Diego but we MUST get there more often.

GIANT white asparagus!
The spice merchant deserves more discussion.  He has every dried fruit and nut known  to man, spices of every description, and at least a dozen different olive preparations.  These "recipes" include olives with couscous/olive oil/basil; couscous/dried tomatoes/olive oil/spices; parsley/spices; couscous/anchovy/herbs; etc. They are all good - even the one with anchovy paste!  He always said that these were his recipes.  Maybe/maybe not - his sales skills deserve more comments!

"Our" olive merchant!
Our olive supplier could sell anything to anyone.  He always remembers us as we walk down the line of stalls and speaks to me in English - he always gives samples.  He treats everyone the same - like they were long lost friends. His usual sales pitch - given with a smile - is that the product your are considering is from his garden in Algeria. With a smile on his face, he told the woman next to us that the dried cranberries (that said Ocean Spray on the sign) were from his garden in Algeria.  Then he said they were from Canada - but she replied that she had seen cranberry bogs in Maine!  The world is indeed small.

Our market is not that unusual - they are all over Paris on different days of the week.  As it is often said, Paris is really just a collection of villages!

Sunday, May 13, 2012

Concert at Sainte Chapelle

Sainte Chapelle
On Friday night we went to Sainte Chapelle with Megan, Philip, Linda, Bob, Peggy, and Tom for a concert by Les Violons de France.  The selections were Vivaldi's Four Seasons, Massenet's "La Meditation de Thais," and Saint-Saens' "The Swan"  from Carnival of the Animals. (This "YouTube" link is of Frederic Moreau, Director of Les Violons de France, playing La Meditation. He was the soloist we heard play La Meditation on Friday night.)  The concert was amazing - the violin soloist and director, Frederic Moreau, was....incroyable!


The setting for the concert enhances the music - Sainte Chapelle is almost indescribable.   Pictures never do it justice.  The chapel was built by Louis IX (Saint Louis) to house his collection of relics including the Crown of Thorns.  The church, completed in 1248, is considered one of the highest forms of Flamboyant Gothic architecture.  It also contains the most important collection of 13th Century stained glass in the world, according to many experts. After seeing it, you would agree!

In 1971, Marie-Elisabeth and I attended a concert at Sainte Chapelle on the night we were engaged in Paris!



Saturday, May 12, 2012

A Walk Through Père Lachaise...Cemetery

Unknown Person - is it the old man reflecting on the life of the young man?
That's right - a tour of a cemetery!  Père Lachaise is one of the most visited sites in Paris - in fact it is reputed to be the most visited Cemetery in the world!  It is the resting place of the "who's who" of French society - as well as many well-known expatriates from the rest of the world who made Paris their home - or who just happened to be in the City of Light when they "met their end."  There are moving sculptural tributes to those who perished in the Holocaust and forced labor camps.

Père Lachaise is also part of the history of the Paris.  The Commune of 1871 culminated here with the execution of  175 "Communards." The wall where they were executed became a symbol of the French Left.  This was the first uprising by the working classes since the beginning of the Industrial Revolution.  The executions did not end the repression - many executions, prison sentences, and deportations to New Caledonia, the French penal colony in the South Pacific, continued after the fall of the Commune.

During one of our stays in Paris in the 1990's, I read the book  Paris Babylon - The Story of the Paris Commune while sitting on benches near the sites talked about in the book!  The wall in Père Lachaise is very real to me; the book gave me a better understanding about the deprivations during and after the siege of Paris in the Franco-Prussian War and the conditions of the working classes in this neighborhood.

But the cemetery is more than history, the home of 300 cats, or the last resting place of the famous and infamous.  It is a beautiful setting - a park-like expanse with trees and hillside paths that wind between the beautiful and quirky funerary art!  Headstones are more than a plaque on the ground.  There are elaborate sculptures, family chapels, and even a touch of humor!  A recent tomb of an artist has a plaque that says - in French  - Alone at Last!

I have been taking people on tours of Pere Lachaise for many years - the first tours were for Marie-Elisabeth's students from her summer program at the Sorbonne.  Later I did tours for both of my mom's "Tina's Travelers" trips to Paris. Since then, I've taken friends and family on a walk through time and history in this interesting site of French/Parisian history.  I found a way to give people an oversight of this massive cemetery without stumbling around for hours to find the sites they would find most interesting.  I concentrated on people Americans would know along with lesser known "Permanent Parisians" with interesting stories or unusual funerary tributes. There are so many stories in Pere Lachaise - one could study the cemetery for years.  

Frederic Chopin - The Tomb says "Fred Chopin"
The founding of the cemetery is a good story in itself.  People were traditionally buried in church yards in Paris.  Unaware of the sanitary issues, more and more burials took place to the point the bones were protruding from church cemeteries.  The final incident that caused a furor was when caskets broke through into the basement of a building adjoining a church burial ground.  Napoleon ordered that new sites were to be found and no more burials were to take place in Paris church yards.

Pere Lachaise - originally known as the "Cemetery of the East"  - was owned by the Jesuits.  The confessor of Louis XIV - Pere Lachaise - lived on the site.  The property eventually fell into private hands.  A clever city planner, Nicolas Frochot,  purchased the property from the Baron Desfontaines for a bargain basement price - 18 years later Frochot sold the Barron a plot for his own burial that was 282 times the price he had been paid for the entire property!

Frochot also came up with a novel way of attracting people to use the Cemetery - which was at that time out in the country and far from Paris.  He moved famous people to Père Lachaise!  Moliere, La Fontaine, Heloise and Abelard were moved.  The trend continued so that Père Lachaise is THE place to be buried in the French capital.

Jim Morrison - The bust has been stolen, graffiti has to be constantly cleaned, the site is fenced, and is often guarded!  Is he really here?  Mr. Mojo Risin!   


I could go on for pages on the stories of some of the tombs - but I will end with a partial list of those buried here:

  • Moliere
  • Chopin
  • Bizet
  • Balzac
  • Yves Montand 
  • Edit Piaf
  • Gertrude Stein and Alice B. Toklas
  • Jim Morrison (The Doors)
  • Sarah Bernhardt
  • Isadora Duncan
  • Rossini
  • Pissarro
  • Poulenc
  • Oscar Wilde
  • Proust
Oscar Wilde - a plastic barrier had to be erected around the base!  A tradition of kissing the tomb with lipstick was causing the stone to deteriorate - it could not be cleaned!!! 
Pere Lachaise - worth the visit!

Saturday, May 5, 2012

Our Front Door Market - Blvd. Edgar Quinet


A familiar looking shopper?
Don't worry - they remove the heads!

The busy street market on Blvd. Edgar Quinet is on our doorstep!  It is open on Wednesday and Saturday mornings with more vendors on Saturday.  There is everything imaginable - and then some!  We take our rolling shopping bag and fill up on all kinds of things - tomatoes that taste like tomatoes, carrots that are tender, olives of every description, cheese (goat, sheep, cow), fish, meats, bread.  The butcher and charcuterie vendors have all kinds of prepared dishes for our lazy side.  The quality and freshness are what makes shopping in France so wonderful!


Fresh vegetables of all varieties!

Fish or shellfish anyone?

....Maybe octopus?

Morille (morel) mushrooms
Roasted chicken, ribs, and potatoes

You can't forget flowers for the table?



Friday, May 4, 2012

May 1 - Labor Day - Place des Vosges...and Politics

Place des Vosges on a busy Labor Day
The last few days have been both busy and lazy - a nice mix.

May 1 was Labor Day in France and in most countries except the United States.  Most businesses were closed (except restaurants/cafes) so we took the opportunity to visit the Place des Vosges with Bob and Linda Thomas.

The Place des Vosges is one of our favorite squares in Paris.  It is a favorite spot to people watch, read, people watch, window shop in the art galleries, and - did I mention people watch?

The square was originally Place Royale due to a former castle on the site.  After the French Revolution, everything "royal" was removed - not only the name was changed but the bronze statue of Louis XIII was melted down - a copy is in the square today.  Place des Vosges is named for a province in France that was the first to pay taxes to the new Revolutionary Government.

The square is the first planned square in Paris and the first royal program of city planning in Europe - Henry IV built the square between 1605 and 1612.  What was new for the time was that the King ordered all of the 35 buildings to follow the same design. The square has been the home of many famous people in French history - Victor Hugo's home is in one corner of the square and is now a museum.  Cardinal Richelieu lived here until he built the Palais Royal - reportedly because he got tired of all of the dueling under his window on the Place.


Since we were near the Place de la Bastille, we decided to watch one of the traditional Labor Day marches that was ending in the square.

This year the marches and rallies had a political overtone since the Presidential elections are May 6.  The Bastille was the site for the Socialist rally with a few "Parti Communiste" members thrown in for good measure.  When the march arrived in the square, they circled around the column in the middle - a symbol of different events of the Revolution of 1830 - (also know as the Second French Revolution).   The entire Square is a commemoration of the First Revolution when the Bastille Prison was stormed by the people on July 14, 1789.  As a result of its history, the Place de la Bastille is a traditional place for protests, marches, and political rallies.

Place de la Bastille
Labor Day March

Labor Day 
Politics continued on Wednesday night when we watch the televised debate between Sarkozy and Hollande - three hours of debate - mostly one on one - no sound bite questions from bland moderators.  Actually it was 3 hours of name calling - they obviously don't like each other very much - no pretending otherwise. Realism in French politics?   I still love the fact that there are no ads on television or radio - only news and this is strictly monitored so each candidates gets exactly the same amount of time in "like" time periods.  The election is on Sunday  but all campaigning must end on Friday night!!!  And I thought I was avoiding political rhetoric by coming to France.....!!!




Tuesday, May 1, 2012

St. Sulpice and Polidor.....


Spring in Luxembourg Gardens

Sunday April 28 was a day of church, organ music, food, and friends! The day started with mass at St. Sulpice, the second largest church in Paris - (Notre Dame is the largest).  We almost didn't leave the flat since it poured with rain in the morning but the weather got better as the day progressed - except for gale force winds at times.

We made our way in the rain to St. Sulpice.  The church was opened in the 17th century and is the second on the site.  One of our reasons for attending was for the 150th anniversary celebration of the "Grand Orgue."  (As the son of a church organist, I can't help but love organ music!)  St. Sulpice's organ is one of the finest in France. More on this later.

St. Sulpice figured prominently in Dan Brown's novel (emphasis intentional) The Da Vinci Code.  So many tourists on a pilgrimage to the places in the novel came to St. Sulpice that the church posted this notice:

(...) Contrary to fanciful allegations in a recent best-selling novel, this [the line in the floor] is not a vestige of a pagan temple. No such temple ever existed in this place. It was never called a « Rose-Line ». It does not coincide with the meridian traced through the middle of the Paris Observatory which serves as a reference for maps where longitudes are measured in degrees East or West of Paris. (...) Please also note that the letters « P » and « S » in the small round windows at both ends of the transept refer to Peter and Sulpice, the patron saints of the church, and not an imaginary « Priory of Sion ».


Not surprisingly Ron Howard was denied permission to film in the church for the movie of The Da Vinci Code.

We met San Diego friends Linda and Bob Thomas after mass and walked to Polidor for lunch.  This restaurant was opened in 1845 and was frequented by Hemingway, Henry James, Victor Hugo, Max Ernst, James Joyce, etc. It is NOT gourmet but lots of character.  You sit at tables with other patrons crowded into the tiny space.  Food is basic but good -you are there for the atmosphere - very "funky" and "Left Bank."  One of the scenes in Midnight in Paris was filmed here when the Owen Wilson's character met Hemingway.  A picture of Woody Allen is taped to the front window of Polidor.  Yes - the restaurant has become a tourist attraction but it is still fun!

Polidor Restaurant
Bob and Linda returned to their apartment and we took a short walk in the Luxembourg Gardens - the tulips were blooming and the horse chestnut trees were starting to flower in both white and pink - alternating sun and white clouds gave the scene an ever-changing perspective.  Since the afternoon organ concert at St. Sulpice was at 4pm, we decided to pass the time at a cafe overlooking the Gardens. The mint with green tea was served in a teapot with the "real stuff" - no tea bags in sight!   A small dog sat at the table behind us - never making a sound.  Humanity walked down the sidewalk in front of us - ah - one of the main reasons I love Paris - the art of living perfected!

The Dog's Life in Paris
The organ concert was amazing - the nave of the church was nearly full and some of the side aisles.  Six prominent French organists, including two from Notre Dame, played selections that started with composers from the 17th century and progressed to the present. Daniel Roth, the principal organist at St. Sulpice since 1985, actually started the commemoration at the mass in the morning with an extended series of compositions for the prelude and postlude. Roth is the latest in a long line of famous principal organists at St. Sulpice that includes Marcel Dupre and Charles-Marie Widor.  The Tocatta (link to listen) from the 5th Symphony of Widor is one of my all time favorites!

Every Sunday at about 11:30 the door to the organ loft opens and you can wind your way up the narrow spiral staircase to the organ loft to meet Daniel Roth and watch him play the massive five register Cavaille-Coll organ constructed in 1862.  We did this two years ago - quite an experience.  The view of the nave from the loft is not bad either!  During the concert, the announcer indicated that they had just finished cleaning ALL 7,000 pipes - they were removed and lined up to be cleaned one at a time!

The concert was memorable and a fitting end to our first Sunday in Paris this trip!