Finally, I got a chance to pay a visit to the "Cimetière du Montparnasse" last Sunday. It was a quiet Sunday morning, and after an overnight rain, it tracked back to a vividing sunny moment with birds waking up after the storm. The cemetary lies numerous graves of different shapes. Yes, they are really of different colours, design, structure, historic and symbolic meaning...I walked in between for about two hours. It was a feeling of reading old-styled poems rather than frightening in the unknown wierd ground. Along the "trail", I met the past of writers, sculptors, singers, engineers, aviators, directors, merchants, booksellers, publishers, auto makers etc...everyone has had one's role and identity to present in the time of life, at least this is significant to a few other people. Something just like what Mitch Albom suggests in his five persons to meet in heaven perhaps...when there is a grave accompanied by an angel with tears, you know how the life thinks about the death. Seeing the modern sculpture erected on top of the place to rest peace, one can see there was a life with passion and aspiration. The symbol constructed on the grave is like an identity, a last phrase to conclude a life, or a last moment of the once-upon-a-time that is to be memorised by the rest who live on. So what would we want to keep on our grave? How would we identify ourselves to have been? Recalling the film "the Jacket" which I saw recently, Jack Starks in the film said that it would only be after death that we see life. Somewhat true. Have paid a worship during my visit to a number of "celebrities" including the director Jacques Demy, the automaker André Citroën, the founder of Cinémathèque Française Henri Langlois as well as the philosphers Jean-Paul Sartre and Simone de Beauvoir. I hope they would not mind letting me to take some photos of this peaceland.
For more sculptures in the area, check: -
http://www.kodakgallery.fr/I.jsp?c=jiw1j59.f1pi2mp&x=0&y=tke1si
2 commentaires:
funny how u could recognise quite a few known-to-you names from the graveyard. it's interesting when u said the symbol on the grave is like the last phase concluding one's life. there must be million of stories lying beneath the ground. if the dead is not dead, wut would they think when they see a man walking between the tombs taking pictures and meditating...?!
One thing that distinguishes HKTB from the authority in Paris is that the graveyard here provides a location map to help the visitors, though the map is not too indicative sometimes...in fact the visit is like a simplified version of reading a biography. There must be some meaning for each life.
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