Bonjour!
I spent a lovely afternoon today wandering around the 16th
arrondissement, where I haven't really spent much time until now because it's mostly a residential area, so I haven't really had any reasons to go there. I didn't really have any reason to go there today, either, but it was rather sunny, and I'm trying to visit all 20
arrondissements during my stay here, and I'd read about at least a couple of interesting (because of the shops that line them) streets in the 16th, which is in the west of Paris. So I took the metro over to
le Pont Mirabeau, the subject of a very famous poem by the French poet
Guillame Apollinaire, which also happens to be one of my favorite poems. (
Here is a link to a clip of the author (as far as I can tell) reading the poem himself; listen to it even if you don't speak French: it's one of my favorites because of the sounds and rhythm of the words, as well as the meaning, so even without understanding it, you can appreciate how the words flow--rather like the waters of the Seine evoked in the first line--as well as the beauty of the rhymes.)
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detail of le Pont Mirabeau |
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What a skyline! Yes, that's Lady Liberty (well, a replica) and the Eiffel Tower in the same shot, as seen from le pont Mirabeau! |
After traversing the bridge, which joins the 15th and 16th
arrondissements, I headed up
Rue d'Auteuil, which my handy Fodor's Paris 2011 mentions as worth seeing as yet another example of a cute, small, windy, traditional, quintessential, quaint Parisian street. But they never get old! Then I followed
Avenue Mozart north through the 16th until I came to
La Muette, where I stopped for lunch in
les Jardins du Ranelagh this funny, triangular park.
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Eglise d'Auteuil |
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Rue Auteuil |
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This is what I love about Paris: you get art like this on regular buildings! This was on the side of an apartment building on Avenue Mozart. |
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Exhibit B: this was a parking garage only a few yards away! How beautiful! |
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Part of the Jardins du Ranelagh, which are bisected by a few streets, making the big triangle into a bunch of little ones! |
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a statue in the Jardins du Ranelagh |
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Another statue in Ranelagh--I wish there had been anything explaining what this was a statue of! |
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the view from where I ate lunch in Ranelagh |
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I found everything about this poop-scooping sign funny... The dog and the human are both walking with such a jaunty gait! And then the dog is just waiting patiently, leash dragging on the ground, while its owner uses a shovel to scoop poop into a plastic bag somehow staying conveniently open! From my many years of dog walking and poop scooping, it's never this easy. But maybe I don't have the magic Parisian touch... |
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another unexplained statue at Ranelagh |
Then I continued my trek north through the 16th, via A
venue Victor Hugo, also lined with pricey shops (the west of Paris homes some of the wealthiest neighborhoods) which runs through
la Place de Victor Hugo, which is like a smaller version of
L'étoile Charles de Gaulle, where
avenue Victor Hugo ends, except minus the
Arc de Triomphe. (The avenue and the circle are named after another
French poet, who was also the author of
The Hunchback of Notre Dame.)
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More palm trees! But these ones were in pots, and I assume the owner brings them in at night... |
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Place Victor Hugo |
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a church on Place Victor Hugo |
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L'Arc de Triomphe as seen from Avenue Victor Hugo |
Next, I headed south along the border of the 16th and the 8th, away from
l'Arc de Triomphe, along
Avenue Marceau, which ends at the Seine in the
Place de l'Alma. If that name rings a bell for any of you, it's because that's also the site of the car crash which killed Lady Diana. I didn't realize that until I got there (remember, this was in August 1997--I was six years old) and found an informal tribute to her combined with another tribute to the Statue of Liberty: an exact replica of the flame she holds.
Then, I thought I'd head over to the Orsay, since it was getting rather chilly with some increasing cloud cover and the setting of the sun, but the line was enormous, and, according to the employee I asked, I can't wait in the shorter line for people who already have tickets even though my student ID means that I don't need to buy a ticket or even wait in line for one, as I found out the last time I was there. I think she might have been wrong, but I decided I'd figure that out another day, and instead head home via the metro from
Place de la Condorde, since the setting sun there always provides a stunning view of
la Tour Eiffel. And as far as I'm concerned, seeing the sun setting behind the Eiffel tower is always a pretty good end to an afternoon!
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one of the statues at Concorde |
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So many things pointing to the sky!
(part of the Ferris wheel, the Eiffel Tower, a lamp post, the obelisk at Concorde) |
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