I CAN GO THE DISTANCE
Our only two appointments today were the Pantheon and Moulin Rouge but we decided to cram a few other things in along the way. Teneille had a bit of a sleep-in while I did domestic things like fold the washing, clean the kitchen, phone home. We found actual milk in a supermarket yesterday so breakfast was half a cup of milk mixed with half a cup of that not-quite-yogurt-but-not-quite-chocolate-milk-stuff we had in the fridge. It created a passable chocolate milk.
We left home after 9am and began our trek to the other side of the Seine. Our first stop, just over Pont Notre Dame was a little Shakespeare and Co book shop. The place is crammed with books from floor to ceiling and even has the little sliding ladders. One of the things we've loved about Paris is the number of book shops. You just don't see them around Sydney anymore. The shop had places to sit and read as well as a piano anyone can play and a resident cat. Today, the shop was meant to have a guest appearance from French actor Gérard Depardieu but his shooting schedule had forced him to postpone the visit.
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| No pictures allowed inside this book shop. |
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| Oops... my bad. |
As we continued towards the Pantheon we found this awesome comic book store that also sold figurines for everything. Mum had told us to look out for a Harry Potter shop but I think this must have been the place. They catered for fans of everything but had a solid Harry Potter section which included wands used by all the characters. There were ties, journals, gloves, pins and more for each of the four Hogwarts houses. There was a golden snitch and various horcruxes, including Ravena Ravenclaw's diadem. Teneille was in nerd heaven.
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| So many wands to choose from... |
The Pantheon eventually came into view and we found the place to be pretty empty which was nice. It was originally built as a church dedicated to the country's patron saint - St. Genevieve - before undergoing numerous changes and ending up as a mausoleum to house the bodies of France's most important citizens. The top level has some great artworks depicting important moments in France's history and the basement, or crypt, has the bodies. Marie Curie is down there as well as the author of The Hunchback of Notre Dame, Victor Hugo. There is a lot of space for new bodies in the crypt and apparently the French President has the power to have people exhumed and relocated if he deems them worthy of a place in the Pantheon.
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| Teneille wants to be French so much she's willing to find her final resting place in the Pantheon crypt. |
We also saw a trampoline in the Pantheon that no-one was allowed to touch. What's the point, then, we thought? A quick Google search later on told us it was there for some sort of performance art.
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| The trampoline you can't touch. |
From the Pantheon we headed over to Luxembourg Palace and the Gardens of Luxembourg. It all looked quite nice but the weather had turned on us so we didn't linger. We went into the Luxembourg Museum to grab a souvenir coin for the gardens. Most tourist attractions have these coins and Teneille has been collecting them. You don't realise how many places we've really been until you look at this little pile of coins.
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| The Luxembourg Palace gardens. |
As we headed for home we took a route that angled us up towards Musee d'Orsay so we could stop by this taxidermy shop I'd read about called Deyrolle. It looks like an extremely small shop front only a few metres wide on the street but then you go upstairs and they have half the block. The place is huge and filled with every stuffed animal imaginable. Tigers, pigs, bears, rhinos, zebras, a giraffe, meerkats, otters, countless birds and bugs. They'd even taken a horse and added wings and a horn to create a pegasus unicorn. You're not allowed to take photos in Deyrolle but they had a unicorn so...

Teneille was really hungry by this stage and a hungry Teneille equals a grumpy Teneille. Luckily for me we must have chanced upon the only street in Paris not to have a million cafes, brasseries or boulangeries. We eventually jumped into the first place we could find and grabbed some food. Crisis averted. From there it was a quick stroll home to chill out before we headed to dinner and a show at the Moulin Rouge.
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| Real estate in Paris is not cheap... |
Our entrance to dinner and the show was being run by the same people who took us to Giverny and Versailles which meant we simply had to meet at their office before jumping on a coach that took us where we needed to be.
Dinner came and went without much issue although there were dramas when they tried to seat us at the Moulin Rouge. The place was packed and it was essentially six to a table. The woman in front of us was so fat she took up two seats. They were going to try and seat us with her anyway but my facial expression must have successfully screamed 'get f***ed' because they ended up moving us to an alternate table.
The show itself was colourful and flashy and had more boobs than one could poke a stick at. Sadly, there wasn't much on offer for the ladies. One part of the show involved an aquarium full of snakes rising out of the floor and one of the dancers diving in. We saw one more set of breasts as we exited the Moulin Rouge - a prostitute plying her trade on the street outside.
By the time we got home we'd done a huge 11km for the day. 77.5km total so far and rising, hence the name of today's blog.