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Adventures in Paris
August 22, 2018
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Published by admin at August 22, 2018
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Ernest and Hadley begin their life in Paris: 74 Rue du Cardinal Lemoine

Ernest and Hadley begin their life in Paris: 74 Rue du Cardinal Lemoine
74 Rue du Cardinal Lemoine

“We were utter strangers in the city of Paris”

~ Hadley

As I was writing this post about Hadley, I got an email from Peter Krynicki, a Hemingway friend and voracious reader. Peter has the enviable gift of remembering much of what he reads. Peter wrote that he was reading Gioa Dilberto’s biography of Hadley and was dragging his feet to finish it because he knows how it will end. It is true that after a handful of glorious years in Paris, Hadley is headed straight into heartbreak and betrayal – but Peter’s comment really got me thinking.

Who can ever know what lies ahead of us?  Would we continue if we knew?  Such beautiful things have been written about this very question, about the value of the journey, rather than the destination. Cavafy’s gorgeous poem comes to mind, with it’s promising first line, As you set out for Ithaca, and Jack Gilbert’s poem, A Brief for the Defense (both of which should be memorized). Whenever I read a novel in which the characters are headed towards certain suffering, I often have to put the book down and prepare myself to continue.  Will they be okay?  Who will help them?  Do they see what’s coming?  Do they have the resources to deal with it?  But I always go back to the book – to the story – because I want to see how it ends, I will always want to know how they endured what they have to endure. As I get older, I see this part of the story as the essence, really, because after living long enough, we know how difficult the going gets – that as glorious as any moment is, we lose everything eventually, one way or another, especially our dear friends. In fiction, this becomes the plot; in a biography, it becomes the central or defining event in a life that can be examined from start to finish. But in our own lives?  It’s part of the journey.

None of us really plans for heartbreak, do we?  Despite the hardships, uncertainties, and failures that are part of almost all stories, we still dream and plan.  We go ahead and take the trip, the risk, or the adventure without knowing what lies ahead of us. This is what makes Hadley’s life so compelling and so unbearably poignant.  Such courage she had!  Such faith in herself and in Ernest and in wherever their new love would take them.

The adventurous tone of their relationship was set long before they set sail for Europe.  Hadley and Ernest began planning in their letters for their life together in Italy, squirreling away money to turn into Italian lires (although they would eventually end up in Paris). This colorful new currency could buy them a new landscape, a whole new life.  They must have seen in each other the qualities that could make such an adventure possible.  Both of them were ready to shed the Midwest, their families and their country for something bolder and more exciting.

Hadley had enough compunction to go forward with no fixed address, no particular plan, and very little money. What she did have was a basic grasp of French, a modern new haircut, and a new husband. In the photos they look brave and happy, but because they are young, they don’t even know they are brave.

Hadley would say later that all of the heartache she suffered were worth it, every sorrow matched by a multitude of memories of wonder and discovery and growth. For Ernest, his five years with Hadley would give him a lifetime of material to write about.

The front door of the former Hemingway apartment

I think of Hadley often as I have had my own adventures in Europe and South America. In the last few years, I have been able to visit some of the places Hadley saw, and many of them haven’t changed that much. In the streets and neighborhoods of Paris, at the bullring in Pamplona, it is easy to feel the joy she and Ernest must have found in these environments. These places still radiate the elegance and uncharted layers of almost mythic history that writers of every decade try to describe.

In November, I got the chance to visit Paris again and see the street where Ernest and Hadley lived in their first apartment.  After a flurry of love letters between Chicago and Saint Louis,  a wedding in Michigan, and a few months in Chicago, here is where their story picks up speed: 74 Rue du Cardinal Lemoine, where the newlyweds begin their life in Paris.  Nothing could dampen their spirits, not the cold weather, post war conditions in the city, a rough neighborhood, or even a tight budget. In fact, some of these hardships, reflected upon later, are part of what was make the story so beautiful.

Here is a passage from Bernice Kert’s book, The Hemingway Women, about their start in Paris:

“Ernest wanted to spend their little store of money for travel and recreation, not fancy digs.  Hadley was as enthusiastic as he was about exploring other parts of Europe. Finally Lewis directed them to a fourth-floor walk up at 74 rue du Cardinal Lemoine, in an archaic, working-class district of the Fifth Arrondissement, far from the good cafes and restaurants. Hadley agreed with Ernest that they should take it. Paris was still wet when they moved in on January 9, 1922 . . . “

”At the top of the street in the old cobblestone square known as Place de la Contrescarpe were the bistros, some of them smelly and awful. Bundles of rags blocked the doorways, then the rags moved, reveling themselves as wine-soaked men and women. The green autobus careened around the corner. Flower vendors dyed their flowers, the purple dye running into the gutters. On the market street. . . housewives shouted and shoved and fought for cheap goods. Tired beggars bleated for alms…

Hadley never developed a love affair with Place de la Contrescarpe to the degree that Ernest did. But she learned to move about it with ease, no longer frightened by the squalor. . . Ernest’s vitality was contagious.”

Place de la Contrescarpe

 

 

Click on the link below to hear Hadley describe their first apartment:

Hadley talks about their first apartment in Paris

The clip is 8 minutes long, with several stops and starts during the conversation. Below are a few photos of my Paris trip!

 

 

 

A close look at he Rodin museum

 

We arrived just in time to see the lights go on, a magical moment!

A glowing window in the Rodin Museum

Norte Dame

My favorite intersection in the world!

Winged Victory at the Louvre and a great reminder not to think too much!

January 30th, 2013

Filed under: Hadley , Hadley Audio , Paris , Uncategorized

Post tags: Hadley Audio • Hadley Tapes 17 • Paris • Peter krynicki

19 Comments

  1. Matt

    Love how you integrate the parallels of your own life with Hadley’s. She was a brave woman, and so are you!

  2. Marianne

    Loved the post, the recording and the poetry.

  3. Allie Baker

    Thank you Matt and Marianne! I appreciate your encouragement and your participation on the blog!

    Allie

  4. melissa burkholder

    Thank you for the photos and sharing your adventures and empathy and passion for Hadley. It is inspiring to hear her cultured voice and her warmth and positiveness come through so clearly. Bumby was lucky to have her and so was Ernest. They did both inspire each other and could not have made the move otherwise, but when it was over between the two of them, Hadley was so much better off. Ernest as she said, just wore her out and ultimately the relationship wouldn’t have been as magical. Hadley got out of the mid-west and on to eventually the right life partner, and she was gracious and wise enough to see how it all worked out for her best life.

    Keep these wonderful posts coming, you are so inspiring!

  5. Allie Baker

    Thank you Melissa! Isn’t it wonderful to be able to hear Hadley tell her own story in her own words? She must have been a lively and interesting companion to alll of the people around her. I am delighted that there is so much information to share about her and that so many people have come to appreciate her.

    Allie

  6. Joe

    A exceptionally great post among already great posts. :) I loved the way you started of and dealt with the “free will” so to speak of characters vs. their predestined ends. It is a wonderful concept, is it not? The poems were an inspired addition and inspiring, all the same. I love the picture of you on the doorstep. If it were in black and white, I’d have thought it was from the 20′s and you were a friend going up to visit the young couple upstairs! As always, Allie, your site is a wonder for the eyes, ears and mind. You find the magical in the already well-worn, often scholarly trod moments and bring them back to life as if one is reading them for the first time! More than this-You bring the 1920′s Paris back to life.

  7. Allie Baker

    Thank you Joe,

    I always appreciate your comments and am glad that you, too, still find delight in the Hemingway stories we all know so well. Those who study Hemingway soon discover that his books lead to an endless trail of interesting people and places. It’s been a pleasure to learn as I go –

    All the best, Allie

  8. corine

    I always relate to your writing, and this latest post particularly talked to me.
    You understand Paris very well. I love the shot you took from the “place Contrescarpe” with the quintessential French man in the background … As a child, I walked so many times through this square with my grand-ma, and this place, indeed, hasn’t changed.
    The lovely picture of you front of the door reminds me of the many shots I have seen of Ernest Hemingway posing front of doors. He loved posing front of doors.
    And Hadley…what a lady. Until I read your blog, I did not pay much attention to her, but you have triggered my interest. I am very moved by the audios, even if I need to listen to them several times, to get everything she says. I smile when she says “armoire” with her lovely accent…”there was an armoire”.
    Thank you for sharing your journey to Ithaca with us. :)

  9. Allie Baker

    Thank you Corine, I’m so glad you enjoyed it. I love Hadley’s feminine perspective on the events of those early years with Hemingway. She seems like someone who could easily be a friend now – she has such an open mind, humor and intelligence! I also love hearing about your perspectives on France!

    Allie

  10. Allie Baker

    Peter, it makes me happy too! Thank you for reading and for commenting, it sounds like you had a nice afternoon –

    Allie

  11. pjk

    U was just rereading this during dinner at my usual Sunday Italian restaurant and being happy.

  12. rebecca

    Missing the mystery of Allie Baker. I just returned from Costa RIca……Not wanting to return home but the love for my dog is well, unbeleivable ! :)
    Trying to do some writing myself. Started a new Storyline thing kinda a blog dont really know what im doing..
    Just thinking of you and wanted to say HI

  13. Patti Long

    So happy to find your website. I’m reading The Paris Wife and now I’m hooked on Hadley and want to know more!

  14. Allie Baker

    Hi Patti –

    Thank you for your comment, and welcome to the blog. You are in good company with your interest in Hadley =) I look forward to posting more!

    Cheers, Allie

  15. Ric Polansky

    such a nice piece…flows well… as if you were there with Papa…makes me wanna go there and visit the bistros.thanks for your lovely efforts… RicP

  16. Allie Baker

    Thank you Ric,

    The bistros are great, but I’d stay where you are for the next few months! Southern Spain beats Paris in the winter, no contest!

    All the best, Allie

  17. Ana

    I´ve just got back from my first time ever in Paris (which was oh so perfect!), and ended up here searching for the address where Hemingway lived in the city.
    I loved this post! And you made me want to read this Hadley biography you mentioned.
    Thanks for sharing it!

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1 Comment

  1. Tom Hyland says:
    April 17, 2022 at 4:29 pm

    I would love to hear Hadley’s interview, however, the link doesn’t appear available. Could you please return it?

    Reply

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Allie Baker brings warmth, intelligence, and a much needed feminine sensibility to the world of Hemingway. I’ve long admired her sense of connection to Hadley in particular, and find her writing and interviewing style refreshing and insightful.

Paula McLain, author of The Paris Wife

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