
We awoke to another wonderful morning in Paris. After we showered and got dressed we headed off to explore Paris. Our primary reason for coming to Paris had been to go to Le Cordon Bleu –we did that on Monday so now we were free to do whatever, wherever. Our objective today was to check out Montmartre and so we left the hotel, walked across the street and hopped on the metro. (photo: wall in Montmartre.)
We didn’t have to switch trains since the no. 12 went right from our stop to Abbesses, where we got off and walked into a very different world. Montmarte, with panoramic views of the city, is certainly unlike the Paris where our hotel is located, funkier and with a flavor of what an older Paris might have looked like before the age of steel and glass, commercial yes but on a very small scale only – neat shops, fruit and vegetable stands along the sidewalks, plenty of exotic food to go, and of course cheese shops – filled with every sort of goat cheese imaginable, or so it seemed to me.



(The word of the day is “funky.”)


After lunch we left the cool little area around rue des Abbesses and walked down to the metro stop at Pigalle – a name that somehow seems to perfectly describe the ambience of this particular area, an are quite similar to what we found just a short ways away near the Moulin Rouge if you get my drift. Anyway we got on the number 2 line (dark blue) and took it to the Pere Lachaise stop – our objective? Yes, that’s right, Pere Lachaise cemetery, probably Paris’ most famous cemetery, and the final resting place of: Balzac, Sarah Bernhardt, Georges Bizet, Maria Callas, Chopin, Delacroix, Gustave Dore, Isadora Duncan, Jim Morrison, Pissaaro, Poulenc, Proust, Rossini, Gertrude Stein, Oscar Wilde, and Richard Wright. And the place is HUGE! I can’t wait to do some serious exploration later this year. And the place just begs to be photographed (over and over and over . . . ).


As the cemetery readied to close we strolled back to the metro stop and took the next train to Notre Dame. We strolled in the Latin Quarter and quickly appreciated why the better guidebooks recommend not staying in the area. One example will suffice: we were strolling down a tiny sidestreet not far from the Seine, choked with tourists – at least they all looked like us rather dazed and slightly clueless, and lined with Greek food shops which sported middle-aged men standing out front hawking their menus in loud voices, sort of like the “girlie” show hawkers at the old county fair carnivals in the American Midwest. Nothing looked attractive in the least, neither the people nor the menus so we scuttled off and headed toward St. Germain a short distance by foot but light-years away in virtually every other respect.
We found a nice outdoor café, sat and had an aperitif. From there we walked 10 minutes or so over to rue Dauphine which runs into the Pont Neuf at the Seine, and found the Indian restaurant we had eaten at 8 years ago, Yugaraj. We stepped inside – and immediately commented on how small it seemed now. Of course my memory had expanded the size considerably over the years. But the service was still terrific and the food outstanding, if a bit on the pricey side. (14 rue Dauphine; ph: 01 43 26 44 91, www.yugaraj.com.)
After dinner we walked over to the Odeon metro stop on St. Germain and headed back to the hotel.
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