And the river is a diamond snake …

Eiffel Tower from Trocadero - Paris
A classic view of the Eiffel tower from the Trocadero, and I know it’s not quite off the beaten track but I couldn’t resist it on that cold March morning as I was walking towards my early morning meeting two days ago. My Nikon D600 at the ready I took this shot as close to the ground as possible. I love the Eiffel tower, a beautiful Art Nouveau architectural delicacy, which we all take for granted, forgetting that people hated it in the late 1800s and artists even petitioned against it and wanted it destroyed.

3f356c77260aae2f51d0d654850bdb3c835bfc09It survived the 1920s thanks to its role in detecting the enemy’s war messages in 1914, as our German neighbours were about to invade Paris. The Military were able to summon all the taxis in Paris and send more troops to the East (close to the river Marne, this is why those taxis are called the “Taxis de la Marne).

Artists hated it back then, and they love it now. Like The Nits, in that beautiful 2005 “The Eiffel Tower” song taken from their album Les Nuits, one of the best kept secrets of the Music industry. The Nits are definitely one of the Earth’s finest Pop bands.

The Nits - Eiffel Tower
An unfortunately very poor photographic rendition of my watercolour (sold), “The Eiffel Tower”, painted after the song by the Nits

Here I am with my child on the Eiffel tower
Looking down
When the light disappears
Paris is a frozen town

Now she turns her face to the camera
A photograph
And the river is a diamond snake
Around her head

I can’t see it anymore
Nobody’s knocking on my door

And we dream that we fall with a parachute
Like angles do
We look at the world through the eyes of birds
Feather words

I can’t feel it anymore
Nobody’s knocking on my door

We land in a street where poets live
Where painters died
The smell in a shop
Vinegar and artichoke

I can’t taste it anymore
Somebody’s knocking on my door

We sleep in a night on the stones of Père
Père Lachaise
We look at the names of Jim Morrison
And Chopin

Yann Gourvennec
Latest posts by Yann Gourvennec (see all)
Prev it's all up to you!
Next Bickering gargoyles ...

2 Comments

Leave a Reply

Discover more from Yann Gourvennec - Photography

Subscribe now to keep reading and get access to the full archive.

Continue reading