Tears for Notre Dame

Imagine my distress when I logged into social media late night on 15 April, only to be confronted by a slew of images of the Notre Dame on fire. I’m not embarrassed to say that I was in tears. I spent the rest of the evening in a shell-shocked state, watching footage of the of the fire raging, of the enormous cloud of smoke billowing into the sky, and finally the spire tumbling to the ground.





I was devastated.





I first set foot in its hallowed halls when I was 18 years
old. It was my first visit to Europe and I was awestruck and wide-eyed the
entire time, but never more so than inside that glorious Gothic cathedral. I
gaped at the intricate carvings of saints and sinners, at the beautiful
woodwork and stonemasonry. I admired the vaulted ceiling high above, the
pillars that lead the eye up to Heaven. I stood in dappled light as the sun
fell in through the Rose window.





And then something amazing happened. A voice – pure, angelic – lifted in song. The words of Ave Maria echoed through that vast space.





Everyone stopped and stared at the young woman, her eyes
cast upwards, her face beatific.





Goosebumps raised on my arms then, and now, while I’m
recalling it again.





The girl finished her song, the last notes drifting through
the air. Her mother hugged her tightly. We all wiped away tears, before the
subdued bustle of hundreds of tourists continued again.





That is how I remember the Notre Dame. It holds a special
place in my memories.





[image error]Suneé in front of the Notre Dame, many years ago…



I’ve been back once since then, and I’ve wanted to go again
for a long time, but now it lies in ruins. I’m incredibly
thankful that I’ve had the opportunity to see it in its full glory. There are
surely millions of others out there, some in Paris right now for the first
time, who are not so lucky as I have been.





If this is not a lesson in living your best life now, while
you can, then I don’t know what is.





It took 200 years to build this magnificent cathedral.





It stood for 850 years.





It will stand again.









Join Ambrose Davids, Freelance Procurement Specialist, as he travels to the City of Love to forget about love, and instead finds illumination beneath the shadows of the Notre Dame.





[image error]



Banshee’s Wail, part 2 of the Mythical Menagerie series. Complete novel coming soon.

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Published on April 30, 2019 01:00
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