Hôtel de Ville’s statue of Étienne Marcel, a Paris government official whose life, according to Wikipedia, “came to a sticky end, lynched in 1358 by an angry mob after trying to assert the city’s powers a little too energetically.” Apparently it was the right amount of energy, though, to have a statue erected in his honor.
Corner detail in Versailles.
A gargoyle overlooks Paris from his Norte Dame perch.
Hôtel de Ville at night. Not quite as cool as
this one, but whatever.
It’s interesting to walk around Paris and catch glimpses of this huge structure peeking through the buildings.
The inside of one of the domes at Versailles. Impressive.
A family looks up at the Eiffel Tower. Most of a family, at any rate.
At the far end of Champs de Mars, across the street from École Militaire, there is a simple pavilion with “peace” etched into its glass walls in various languages.
A quirky cafe we randomly dropped into to enjoy some espresso. (Well, drink some espresso and try not to make faces.)