It was Henri III who, in 1578, laid the first stone of this structure, but it was Henri IV who, in 1607, completed this colossal work. The Pont Neuf, despite its paradoxical name, is today the oldest bridge in Paris. It was the first to be devoid of houses, thus offering passersby an unobstructed view of the city, a novelty that symbolized openness and modernity.
I remember the tales my grandmother used to tell, her gaze lost in the meanders of the river, evoking the flower vendors who once brightened the parapets of the bridge with their colorful stalls. The laughter of children playing tag on the stone benches, the clatter of horse hooves pulling gilded carriages, all of this resurfaces as if in a madeleine dipped in a cup of tea, a flood of memories filling my mind.
The Pont Neuf was also a witness to the great moments and tragedies of Paris. The rumbling revolutions, the royal processions, the star-crossed lovers swearing fidelity under the fading stars of dawn. Each stone, each nook, bears the indelible mark of those who have walked it, kings and paupers, poets and anonymous souls.
When I stroll there at dusk, the streetlamps casting shifting shadows, it seems to me I can hear the whisper of centuries. The Pont Neuf, far from being merely a passage from one bank to the other, is a bridge between the past and the present, a link between memories and eternity.
It is a living canvas where each stone, each statue tells a story, where one can still, if one listens closely, perceive the echoes of old troubadour songs, the cries of newspaper vendors, and the gentle lapping of the Seine, faithful companion to so many secrets.
Thus, the Pont Neuf remains, through the mists of time, a symbol of Paris. It is to Parisians what a madeleine dipped in tea is to Proust, an open door to infinity, a memory where sweetness and sorrow intermingle, a constant reminder of the fleeting beauty of our existence.
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