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Hemingway

The Begining of the Legend He Would Create

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The Begining of the Legend He Would Create

In March 1918, Ernest Hemingway voluteered for the Red Cross in what would be the final months of World War I. Departing at the end of May for France he arrived and had a few nights in Paris before heading to Milan. It was the first time Hem would step foot into Europe, and as we know it wouldn’t be the last.

On June 10, he would be assigned to drive an ambulance but the future war correspondant wanted to be closer to the action. Asking to work the canteen closer to the front near the Piave River he would hatch a plan that could have ended his life. Feeling like he could better serve the men he asked for a bicycle, so he can take goods straight to them. They agreed and with his bag filled with cigarettes, chocolate and cigars he would ride straight into the trenches.

For the first 6 days it was fine, on the 7th day at midnight an Austrian mortar was fired into the trech. On July 8, 1918 Hemingway would be wounded by over 200 pieces of shrapnal into his lower legs. In front of him, Italian soldier Fedele Temperini of Montalcino, only 26 years old would die instantly and another next to Hem would be terribly wounded. With the shrapnal in his leg and covered with blood he picked up the soldier and ran 150 yards taking him to safety.

As soon as he arrived at the hospital they attempted to remove the shrapnal and later the worst in his knee and right foot were finally retrieved. Hemingway would carry the tiny pieces in a coin purse with him the rest of his life.

It was during his stay at the American Red Cross Hospital in Milan that he would meet and fall in love with nurse Agnes Von Kurowsky. A woman that would forver mark his life and how he viewed relationships.

Ernest was the first American soldier that would survive his injuries. The Italian’s later awarded him with the Silver Medal and the Croce al Merito di Guerra. It was only weeks before his 19th birthday, and would forever change him as a man.

From here on out he chased the action and the story, he left before his heart was broken again and became the larger than life figure in his own books.

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The Lasting Legacy and Love of the Louvre

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The Lasting Legacy and Love of the Louvre

When my grandparents went to Paris they always sent postcards back to friends and family. My grandma always wrote “save this postcard” on them and lucky for me we have many of them. I just found two the other day, sent a day apart and one from my grandpa to the kids and one from my grandma to her parents. It was April 1972 and it was their first visit to Paris.

It's their handwriting I know so well from all the journals and everything I have of theirs and it's comforting and a little sad when I see it. I can imagine the two sitting in a cafe filling out the cards with a few facts of their trip. These two really struck me because they mention the Louvre.

Grandpa’s postcard of Notre Dame

“Dearest kids…. Yesterday we did the Eiffel Tower. In AM I did Sorbonne, Notre Dame, etc. I love this beautiful city. Our hotel, real deluxe. Will do Louvre tomorrow.”

Grandma’s postcard with Mona Lisa

“Dearest family, we saw this world treasure - also the Venus de Milo. Still can’t believe we are here although we walked miles up the left bank to the Louvre and then the Champs Elysees to the Arc de Triomphe. Will hate to leave Paris - I love it, almost more than San Francisco. “

My grandpa also kept a steno pad filled with notes on what they did.

“First saw the Mona Lisa and other paintings in the Salle des États, then Galerie d’Apollon (beautiful) then walked through the Egyptian & Greek antiquities + the Venus de Milo. Walked through the Porte Henri II, Cour Carrée and the Port Egyptienne over and through Eglise Saint Germain l’Auxerrois.”

Seeing my grandpa write the exact name of the salle where the Mona Lisa is and his feelings of the Galerie d’Apollon makes me so happy. Even two generations later, it is the same love I have and it is all because of them. These are treasures I will keep with me forever.

I would give anything to have been able to visit the Louvre with them but I did share so much of it with my grandma. She loved to read my posts and articles and talk about how much she loved Paris and of course all the pastries and chocolate until the very end. In a few weeks I will take a bit of her back so she will always be a part of Paris.

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