7 janvier 1985; Monday
I arrived in Paris Saturday the 5th at Charles de Gaulle Airport, and took the bus into Paris with the group. I was impressed by the "Americanness" of so much of what I saw, yet at the same time permuted in its own peculiar french way. When one anticipates traveling in Europe, I imagine that it is easy to forget that for all the history, most of Western Europe is very modern, XXth century. Freeways slip past XVIIth, XVIIIth, XIXth century houses without pause, and the littel cars with yellow headlights climb over cobblestones laid many years ago.
After establishing myself at the hotel <- St Sulpice, I went out with some people to try the Metro, &c. We went to l'Arc de Triomphe & the Champs-Elysees and looked around a lot. I wasn't too impressed - the Champs-Elysees was so "touristy" and the Arc just sort of brooded over it all, monument to another unnecessary, painful human folly. The flame burned insomnolently, but its focus seemed other than the present moment.
Yesterday, I went to see this Magritte exhibition across from Beaubourg, for I have always liked Magritte and surrealism in general. It was no disappointment, & after dwelling several hours peering at Magritte's dark, dusky symbols, I checked out the Centre G. Pompidou, and moved on to see the Musee Rodin across town. Rodin is gorgeous, I love his statues - I expect to return here better prepared for what I will see. I was plunged into an extremely pensive mood by all this art, and unfortunately became depressed - the snow fell, and it was cold, & I could not sleep last night (perhaps that's jetlag too). Somehow al that art got me thinking of the John Barth book I read over vacation amongst the redwoods of the isolated California coast - my home. The book was called Chimera, and all the mythological references made there were evoked by the Rodin statuary. Coming out of Rodin, I went past "Invalides" & l'Eglise de la Dome. Anyway, I finally returned to the hotel.
[The "retroblogging" project: this is a "back-post" transcribed from a paper journal on 2013-04-28. I've decided to "fill-in" my blog all the way back. It's a big project. But there's no time limit, right?
I
will concede: frankly, this is very pretentious, embarrassing,
unpleasant writing to look back on - especially considering it was my
own journal? In 1985, who was I thinking was going to read it - some
futuristic world-wide computer network?]
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