Restaurant Week à la française! From October 1st to 14th, more than 1,500 restaurants will participate in a restaurant week of sorts in Paris and other French cities, called Tous au Restaurant (everyone to the restaurant). The reservations open September 25th at 10:00 a.m. Paris time (4:00 a.m. EST), and can only be made on the Tous au Restaurant site, run by La Fourchette. [ . . . ]
Montmartre vendange, Paris, October 11-15
As reported in July’s Connexion, Paris has a thriving vineyard scene and the annual harvest (vendange) is celebrated in style at the most famous of these among the historic streets of hilltop Montmartre. Expect wine-themed parades and exhibitions as well as concerts and plenty of tasting opportunities. On the Sunday afternoon at 17:00 on Square Louise-Michel there will be a glamorous street disco, called Le Bal Dalida, to mark the 30th anniversary of the death of the celebrated chanteuse.
“Le vent fera craquer les branches La brume viendra dans sa robe blanche
Y aura des feuilles partout
Couchées sur les cailloux
Octobre tiendra sa revanche
Le soleil sortira à peine
Nos corps se cacheront sous des bouts de laine
Perdue dans tes foulards
Tu croiseras le soir
Octobre endormi aux fontaines Il y aura certainement, Sur les tables en fer blanc Quelques vases vides et qui traînent Et des nuages pris aux antennes Je t´offrirai des fleurs Et des nappes en couleurs Pour ne pas qu´Octobre nous prenne On ira tout en haut des collines Regarder tout ce qu´Octobre illumine Mes mains sur tes cheveux Des écharpes pour deux Devant le monde qui s´incline Certainement appuyés sur des bancs Il y aura quelques hommes qui se souviennent Et des nuages pris sur les antennes Je t´offrirai des fleurs Et des nappes en couleurs Pour ne pas qu´Octobre nous prenne Et sans doute on verra apparaître Quelques dessins sur la buée des fenêtres Vous, vous jouerez dehors Comme les enfants du nord Octobre restera peut-être. Vous, vous jouerez dehors Comme les enfants du nord Octobre restera peut-être.”
– Francis Cabrel
Jack Kerouac “October in the Railroad Earth”
“There was a little alley in San Francisco back of the Southern Pacific station at Third and Townsend in redbrick of drowsy lazy afternoons with everybody at work in offices in the air you feel the impending rush of their commuter frenzy as soon they’ll be charging en masse from Market and Sansome buildings on foot and in buses and all well-dressed thru workingman Frisco of Walkup ?? truck drivers and even the poor grime-bemarked Third Street of lost bums even Negros so hopeless and long left East and meanings of responsibility and try that now all they do is stand there spitting in the broken glass sometimes fifty in one afternoon against one wall at Third and Howard and here’s all these Millbrae and San Carlos neat-necktied producers and commuters of America and Steel civilization rushing by with San Francisco Chronicles and green Call-Bulletins not even enough time to be disdainful, they’ve got to catch 130, 132, 134, 136 all the way up to 146 till the time of evening supper in homes of the railroad earth when high in the sky the magic stars ride above the following hotshot freight trains–it’s all in California, it’s all a sea, I swim out of it in afternoons of sun hot meditation in my jeans with head on handkerchief on brakeman’s lantern or (if not working) on book, I look up at blue sky of perfect lostpurity and feel the warp of wood of old America beneath me and I* have insane conversations with Negroes in second*-story windows above and everything is pouring in, the switching moves of boxcars in that little alley which is so much like the alleys of Lowell and I hear far off in the sense of coming night that engine calling our mountains.
But it was that beautiful cut of clouds I could always see above the little S.P. alley, puffs floating by from Oakland or the Gate of Marin to the north or San Jose south, the clarity of Cal to break your heart. It was the fantastic drowse and drum hum of lum mum afternoon nathin’ to do, ole Frisco with end of land sadness–the people–the alley full of trucks and cars of businesses nearabouts and nobody knew or far from cared who I was all my life three thousand five hundred miles from birth-O opened up and at last belonged to me in Great America.” – Jack Kerouac