A chance find of an old book while rummaging through an untidy pile in a small second-hand bookshop not too far from the Sacred Heart Church of Montmartre led me to this nineteenth century French poet.
Paris is my beloved city, I fell in love there and have fond memories of countless heady hours spent with my sweetheart exploring its hidden treasures and pleasures. She was born and brought up in Paris and knows the city inside out. We never went up the Eiffel Tower nor took the boats along the river Seine, but preferred to walk along its banks,
It was a fairly warm and lazy summer afternoon, the type that tells you to linger and rummage among old books in small second-hand book shops. Glancing into the shop was enough; the dusty unkempt look was too hard to resist. At the far end a man, whom I took to be the owner of the bookshop, sat talking and gesticulating on the phone. I went in. There were books in piles and books, somewhat arranged, in shelves. And there were boxes of old forks and knives. There were also some painted canvasses, large and small, and other knick-knacks, all in their own random places.
I mucked around and found several interesting first editions, all beyond my reach as was evident from the penciled-in prices. My enthusiasm as a bibliophile was limited to about twenty euros so I moved on to another cheaper looking pile. In that pile was this slim volume, bound, with a brick red leather spine and a patterned paper cover: LE SANG DE LA COUPE - TH. DE BANVILLE, POÉSIES.