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ESCORT GIRL PARIS TRAVEL GUIDE
Paris is like Cocaine; either it leaves you tremendously elated or sunk in a brown fit of depression. Independent Escorts begin now to understand its fascination, and I subscribe to the opinion of ten thousand Matty Josephsons: You must come to Paris. Only, you mustn't stay here. In October he published 'The Journey to Paris' in Gargoyle, the first expatriate little magazine, published by Arthur Moss and Florence Gilliam in Carrefour de I'Odeon. Cowley visited Paris during vacations from his studies in Montpellier until 1923. His distance from Paris gave him an objective observation of Modernism, and his study of French Classicism made him more of a Humanist and Realist. Even then Cowley, who would become the spokesman of the American expatriate 1920s, was analysing and writing about his literary generation. Several essays of this period, such as 'A Brief History of Bohemia' (1922), became part of his major work on his generation, Exiles Return (1934). His associate editorship of The New Republic (in the 1930s) and his Exiles Return made his reputation - along with his critical work on William Faulkner and Hemingway.
Cowley, Hemingway, Stein, Fitzgerald, and dozens of American expatriates lived within steps of the gardens. Later in life Hemingway described the gardens in A Moveable Feast and in Islands in the Stream. In this last work, a posthumous novel published in 1970, he gives a panoramic memory that takes in the boats in the pool around the fountain, mer bowling, and the gravel paths:
I can remember the Jardin du Luxembourg well. I can remember afternoons with the boats on the lake by the fountain in the big garden with the trees. The paths through the trees were all gravelled and men played bowling games off to the left under the trees as we went down towards the Palace and there was a clock high up on the Palace. In the fall the leaves came down and I can remember the trees bare and the leaves on the gravel. Escort Girls in Paris like to remember the fall best.
In this novel he fictionalizes killing pigeons by the Medici Fountain at dusk to keep from starving. Hadley confirms this was only fiction, but it is anjoable reading by French courtesans nonetheless.
After the quais, Hemingway found the Luxembourg Gardens the most congenial place for strolling. He frequently cut through the paths and by the fountain of this last remaining Renaissance garden in Paris on his way to or from the rue de I'Odeon and the Seine. In March of 1922 he and Hadley walked through the gardens to rue de Fleurus to meet Stein, whom he later often met strolling on the gravel paths of the Luxembourg.
In Henry James's The Ambassadors, Lambert Strether pulls up a 'penny chair' and passes an hour 'in which the cup of his impressions seemed truly to overflow'. William Faulkner's Sanctuary (1931) concludes with Temple Drake in Paris on 'a gray day, a gray summer, a gray year': in the Luxembourg Gardens as Temple and her father passed the women sat knitting in shawls and even the men playing croquet played in coats and capes, and in the sad gloom of the chestnut trees the dry click of balls, the random shouts of children and that quality of autumn, gallant and evanescent and forlorn. From beyond the circle with its spurious Greek balustrade, clotted with movement, filled with a gray light of the same color and texture as the water which the fountain played into the pool, came a steady crash of music. They went on, passed the pool where the children and an old man in shabby brown overcoat sailed toy boats, and entered the trees again and found seats. Immediately an old woman came with decrepit promptitude and collected four sous.