Lit in striking blue, last weekend, the Town Hall of the 15th arrondissement of Paris transformed its classical façade into a glowing beacon against the night. Paris has long been known as the City of Light for its pioneering street lamps of the 17th century, as well as the illumination of ideas, revolutions, and art that have shaped its development. Standing before this radiant display, I could feel the history of the past and the poetry of the present. The following poem reflects on that luminescence, and on Paris’s eternal legacy of light. Blue Illumination Beneath the Paris night, the town hall glows like sapphire a building breathing in blue, the calm in the city storm. Blue: the hue of protection, the police light cutting through fog, a signal of order, vigilance, yet also the tint of coldness, of skies that stretch beyond fear, of voices speaking truth into the dark. White: the steady lamp of clarity, a torch of reason held aloft, illumination without judgment, guiding footsteps through shadowed streets, echoing the Enlightenment that once made Paris the City of Light. Red: the urgent blaze of fire and sparks, the courage of fire fighters in the night, revolutions remembered in flame, and the heroism of those who run into the burning core to save what can still be saved. Together blue, white, red they weave into the nation’s flag, overpowered by the light but with the vow: to protect, to guide, to endure. Blue lingers longest a balm for the restless soul, reminding us that even in chaos, peace can be summoned, protection can shine, and light will always find its way back to stone. Revolution once cracked the dark and poets wrote verse under lamplight. Stand before it now and feel the glow of the blue illumination and the eternal Paris promise that light will find your peace, your soul, your heart. Can’t see the whole article? Want to view the original article? Want to view more articles? Go to Martina’s Substack: The Stories in You and Me More Paris articles are in my Paris website The Paris Residences of James Joyce Rainy Day Healing - gaining ground in life Invite your friends and earn rewardsIf you enjoy The Stories in You and Me , share it with your friends and earn rewards when they subscribe. |
Sunday, 28 September 2025
Blue Light, Lamplight in the City of Light
Cross Fit for the Mind
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Thursday, 25 September 2025
Panther, leopard & jaguar as metaphors in literature
Panther, leopard & jaguar as metaphors in literature… big cats slip smoothly between biology, mythology, and literature …
Big cats – the genus Panthera – appear with remarkable consistency as a literary motif of danger and dignity, but also creativity and transformation. As I was doing a panther jigsaw, I thought of three literary greats, separated by continents and centuries, that reminded me of their distinct interpretation: the 12th century poem The Knight in the Panther’s Skin by Shota Rustaveli from Georgia, the 1958 novel The Leopard by Italian Giuseppe Tomasi di Lampedusa, and the 1987 The Jaguar Smile: A Nicaraguan Journey by Indian-born Salman Rushdie. Rustaveli in The Knight in the Panther’s Skin uses the panther as an emblem of transformation in his medieval epic poem of 1,656 verses. Princess Tinatin asks knight Avtandil to search for a mysterious solitary knight, Tariel, who wears a panther’s skin: a wild, courageous, uncontrollable man. In return, if found, she will marry Avtandil. Meanwhile, Tariel is searching for his unfathomable love Nestan-Darejan. The panther’s skin functions as spiritual protection but also grief, symbolizing inner strength forged through suffering, yet there is transformation and hope: “The dry rose falls within the garden, a new rose arises there.” In Lampedusa’s The Leopard, the animal serves as a metaphor for historical decline. Don Fabrizio is the “Leopard” representing the Sicilian aristocracy facing obsolescence amid Italy’s unification. Unlike Rustaveli’s panther, which denotes vitality through transformation, Lampedusa’s leopard becomes a symbol of elegant exhaustion: a creature out of step with its environment, yet regal in decline. The paradox of survival through change is encapsulated in the novel’s most cited line: “If we want things to stay as they are, things will have to change.” The leopard motif underscores aristocracy’s twilight, caught between tradition and inevitability, even as individuals resist. Rushdie’s The Jaguar Smile situates the jaguar within the context of revolutionary Nicaragua. Unlike the panther’s lament or the leopard’s nostalgia, the jaguar here becomes a national emblem of resilience, ferocity, and creativity under pressure. Rushdie characterizes the jaguar as both a literal presence in Nicaraguan iconography and a figurative representation of the Sandinista movement. The “smile” of the jaguar captures a paradoxical quality: the simultaneous menace and hope of revolutionary struggle. It symbolizes danger and resilience in the present tense, energy in motion, and the unpredictability of history as a new path is forged. Taken together, these three works demonstrate the elasticity of the big-cat motif: panther – grief transformed into strength; leopard – aristocratic decline and the dignity of loss; jaguar – revolutionary resilience and national identity. What unites them is the recognition of the big cat as a threshold figure: both feared and admired, shadow and light, mystery and spirituality. In all three contexts, the big cats signal forces larger than the individual, whether love and grief, historical change, or political upheaval. The recurrence of panther, leopard, and jaguar imagery across these otherwise disparate works suggests a cross-cultural symbolic resonance. Big cats are elusive apex predators, but in literature, they often stand for mysterious forces beyond human control: history, desire, death, transformation, fate. Perhaps that is why these books resonate so powerfully. Their presence in the works of Rustaveli, Lampedusa, and Rushdie underscores the enduring literary function of the predator as metaphor: an image through which writers confront mortality, history, transformation, and survival. The big cats suggest that life is never fully tamed; there is danger but also a strange kind of beauty and the recognition that survival is not about comfort, but about movement, adaptation, and grace. Whether in a Georgian epic, an Italian elegy, or a Nicaraguan travelogue, the panther, leopard, and jaguar circle us still. Their shadows stretch across centuries, and the literary jungle is never without its predators. Can’t see the whole article? Want to view the original article? Want to view more articles? Go to Martina’s Substack: The Stories in You and Me More Paris articles are in my Paris website The Paris Residences of James Joyce Rainy Day Healing - gaining ground in life You're currently a free subscriber to The Stories in You and Me . For the full experience, upgrade your subscription. © 2025 MARTINA NICOLLS |
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