A STROLL FROM SAINT GERMAIN DES PRÈS IN THE AREA SURROUNDING
THE HOTEL LOUIS II.
The Saint Germain des Près CHURCH, the oldest church in Paris ... but
also CAFES ... BOOKSHOPS ... SHOPS... JAZZ... BISTROTS ... LIFE... BOHEMIA ...
PEOPLE HAVING A GOOD TIME ...CINEMAS ... THEATRES ... NIGHT LIFE.
The Hotel Louis II is the sun that shines in the heart of this Paris, vibrant
with life.
One hotel façade overlooks the St Sulpice street
just 20 yards away from the church and the other gives onto the rue de Condé.
The hotel derives its name from Louis II of Condé, Sun King’s cousin,
Louis XIV. An eminent soldier, aesthete and philosopher, Condé was a great
man and a friend of Molière, Boileau, La Fontaine and Bossuet. The XVth
Century houses of Saint Germain des Près are still soaked in the atmosphere
of this era.
The musketeers of King Louis XIV, who were
made famous by Alexander Dumas, lived very close by – Athos in rue Férou,
Aramis in rue Servandoni and Porthos in rue du Vieux Colombier.
In this district
filled with publishers and bookshops
Sylvia Beach had opened the Shakespeare and Co bookshop at 12 rue de l’Odéon
and Adrienne Monier at number 7.
William Faulker, Henry Miller and Ernest Hemingway loved to hang around in these
places in the rue Férou and the Jardin du Luxemburg before taking a seat
in the bars of Montparnasse. Scott and Zelda Fitzgerald lived at 58 rue de Vaugirard.
In the forties, Picasso and Cocteau had lunch at Odeon Square. And, several years
later, the sound of jazz would entice you into the cellars where people danced
to the music of Boris Vian and the songs of Juliette Gréco.
The school of Fine Arts, the art galleries, the Orsay museum and the Haute Couture
decoration boutiques express at one and the same time the cultural past of France
and its modernness.
The famous cafes, the Flore, the Deux Magots and the Procope (the oldest cafe
in Paris) have been home for Romanticism, Impressionism, Existentialism, Surrealism
and many others.
Verlaine, Rimbaud, Mallarmé, Picasso, Hemingway, Simone de Beauvoir, Albert
Camus and Jean–Paul Sartre were inspired by these places.
The district of St Germain des Près, birthplace of the intellectual and
artistic history of Paris and of France has retained all of his character.
A wind of liberty blows here, with an indescribable village flavour.
“Yes, this is the place to go in order to breathe,
dream and draw out time through its endless sensations”
Charles Baudelaire, in his poem “Invitation to the Voyage.”