When I first got to Paris, it was twilight
on a warm Saturday in July. A delayed flight, a missed connection and the
detritus of a cold had left me drained. All I wanted was a shower and a bed. But
as RER B swept from Charles de Gaulle airport to Gare du Nord, it was impossible
to miss the Eiffel Tower, suffused in blue and gold, in the distance though my weary
mind didn’t quite process it then.
The next morning, as we exited the Metro onto
Quai Saint-Michel, there was Notre-Dame de Paris across the Seine. My first proper
sight of Paris or, to be pedantic, a Parisian landmark. This, perhaps, is why
for me Notre-Dame immediately spells Paris; as much as the Eiffel or the Arc deTriomphe or the Centre Pompidou does.
Crossing the road and the Pont des Coeurs
we were soon part of the jostling line of visitors entering the cathedral. And
on that Sunday, even as we walked in and looked around, we were reminded by the
soaring voices of a choir celebrating Mass that we were in a living, breathing
place of worship. A place of beauty, but also one that offered tantalising
whiffs of timelessness; the sort of timelessness I sometimes felt in the sanctum
sanctorum of Trivandrum’s Padmanabhaswamy temple in the quiet, un-crowded hours
before dawn.
And that’s a presence we’ve carried with us. For Our Lady of Paris watches over us from the walls of our home, even as her gargoyles crouch on another wall, keeping an eagle-eye on me as I write this.
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