Monsieur Virgule makes it a point of honor
to oppose the suspension of Paris’s Bouquinistes.
What a brilliant idea! The opening parade of the Olympic Games along the Seine—what a journey steeped in culture! Imagine those athletes, heirs to Homer, whose Iliad, the foundational epic of Western history, includes the first mention of organized sports games held by Achilles. Picture them gliding past the river, presided over by Poseidon, who, according to ancient Greek historians, secured the first Olympic victory by gifting Pelops a golden chariot and winged horses.
Wouldn’t Pierre de Coubertin, who proclaimed the rebirth of the Olympics in the grand amphitheater of the Sorbonne in the name of education and knowledge, have been thrilled?
The history of the Games is intrinsically tied to culture, and no city can embody this symbiosis better than Paris, the world capital of the arts. The Seine’s banks are graced by some of the most iconic cultural landmarks: the Eiffel Tower, the Palais de Chaillot, the Museum of Modern Art, the Musée d’Orsay, the Louvre, the Grand Palais, the Quai Branly Museum, the Monnaie de Paris, the École des Beaux-Arts, the Institut du Monde Arabe, the Institut de France, Voltaire’s House, Notre-Dame de Paris, the Cité de la Mode, the French National Library... and, of course, the Bouquinistes, who long predated most of these monuments, anchoring their green boxes to the Quais in 1859, the same year the now-lamented spire of Notre-Dame was erected!
Aware that the primary purpose of hosting the Olympic Games is to showcase Paris’s identity and promote high-quality tourism, the organizers will surely have planned to highlight these incomparable republican symbols—designated as part of France’s intangible cultural heritage—that are the colorful stalls of the Bouquinistes…
Wouldn’t they?
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