She moved as might a monarch approaching the opening of some great show, preceded by a minion leading a miniature poodle.
She stopped, surveying her realm left and right, squatted and delicately placed three perfectly formed turds on the satin granite pavement. No hurry.
Her minion waited ahead, indifferent to the Ritz doormen who feigned not noticing her indiscretion.
The standard poodle rose like a filling spinnaker, full of self-importance and padded on with careless graceful steps deigning to look neither left or right.
One white-gloved doorman withdrew to the telephone in arrears and delegated the unpleasantness to the Mairie – who delegated the job to a north African more appropriately positioned for the actual removal of the faecal treasures now adorning the forecourt.
This girl knew social ordure. She knew her place – elevated by the wealth of her owner; above the niceties and social graces of polite company. She was Canus aristocraticus and that was that. Her minion knew his place too. Minions of lesser beings – perhaps the bourgeoisie would be expected to scoop, bag and withdraw everything except their dignity – the ghost of which would remain there on the pavement. But not this chap. He was not a groveller to mere doormen, Ritz or no Ritz. They were just draft stoppers in plush uniforms they didn’t even own, (but for which they paid their own laundry costs) and he was not obligated to treat them with anything greater than the poodle’s disdain.
The doormen were practiced nose downlookers and they adored exercising their imagined status by applying their stonewalling indifference on rubber necked passers-by. Even Dolce and Gabbana-clad bling monsters. No, particularly D&G bling monsters. Gold was not class and bling was certainly not class. You may park your Maserati momentarily here sir. I’m sorry sir, but we just don’t have the space for sir’s BMW.
It was not their job to doff a white glove, don a rubber glove and abduct a Richard the Third. But they were growing concerned at the time being taken by the Mairie’s man to appear. They conferred. There were discrete utterances from corners of mouths, cheesy smiling at residents entering and leaving the hotel and subtle body language suggesting that sir and madame might prefer an upwind route for the moment.
It was decided. The youngest doorman – perhaps a doorboy was despatched and returned at a clip with an empty poubelle which he gently placed upended over the still steaming pile. This had the effect not so much of warding passers by off or preventing them from stepping in the offending ordure, but it seemed to create a kind of public exhibit. Passers by gathered to see the Ritz’s latest piece of installation art.
The Mairie’s emergency van arrived. Out sprang two men in blackface in overalls with brooms. The tall one approached the upturned bin with due caution. The short one pushed back the growing crowd.
The tall man carefully lifted the upturned bin, placed it on his head – helmet like, tapped the ground twice with the end of his broom stick. The short man stood next to him and eyed the doormen. He tapped his broomstick twice on the ground … and sang “If you’re blue and you don’t know where to go to, Why don’t you go to where fashion shits ? Put one on the Ritz…….”
Editor’s Note: The Ritz is a fine organisation and no way does Emmjay or anyone vaguely resembling Emmjay have any hard feelings just because they closed the Hemingway Bar and denied him a nostalgia dry martini. But some of this story is true. We are led to believe that the faecal matter was removed but according to Emmjay, not while he was there.

While you are at it Emm, any chance on checking the Parisian zinc-alume situation with remote controlled garage doors and/or Cul-de Sacs with Mac Mansions? It seems pretty French to me. 🙂
Love to FM from G&H
LikeLike
Seriously. I’ll walk this in.
This is about a dog, right. There’s this poo-dle see and it poos where it didn’t oughter. After a graphic openin’ the writer introduces some other characters like about as far fetched. As if anybody’d be sniffy because a poo-dle drops one on a pavement. Stands to reason. Washes off anyway in the rain down the drain (into the Seine?). Thinks, three’s worth reportin’ and next thing the door johnnies call in a forecourt attendant outfit, turns out it’s the openin’ scene of *PRINCESS POO-DLE POO! THE MUSICAL! * **Fully merchandised**
rated*****
LikeLike
😉
LikeLike
It’s as if you are here, ‘Shoe ! Good one !
LikeLike
How about some info on the cultural habits of the French at the supermarkets, especially at the delicatessen section.
I bet the shop girls don’t shove their hands inside plastic bags to grab the pre- sliced salami or ham and then to smash it into an unrecognisable lump of something.
How about the trolleys? Are they allowed to travel around the Parisian arrondissements?.
LikeLike
No trollies around our way, Gez, supers are more like micro markets – but entirely useful. We have a huge open air market on B. Richard Lenoir on Thursdays and Saturdays – where just about any kind of food can be procured and lots of other stuff besides. Some stalls have wonderfully entertaining sellers. Others – the most popular look very pressed and staff tend to be a bit curt. Fruit and veggies are very reasonably priced. Too chicken to buy seafood – off the ice there – and too lazy to want to cook it at home, stink up the apartment and have a big cleaning job to do as well. We have enjoyed some fresh fish in restaurants – cod for FM and sea bass fillet for me. And we had a wonderful lobster – homard (tiny thing – more crab-like and not like our Aussie ones) in a pasta dish that was delicious.
Restaurant prices pretty steep for deent tucker but the quality has been very good. Whacking on the kilos – severe dieting when we return 😦
LikeLike
Sorry if I’m offensive, but that creature in the pic is seriously ugly.
Friend of ours used breed hairless Chinese dogs, even they looked better than this one here.
Whilst you ritzing it in Paris, we here are battling with the Hebe Hater, she has pulled out every plant out her front garden, which of course is not hers but part of the communal area….
There”s a war brewing 🙂
LikeLike
Hi H, I’ll resist the jeebies quip and say that I totally agree with you, the clipped poodles do nothing for me either. The rough curly-haired ones are OK, though. But it was the frizzed coiffed miniature ones that appeared in the restaurants. Despite that there were really a lot of quite big dogs in central Paris on leads. We wonder where their owners keep them – in such small apartments.
Remember when Balmain even had T-shirts claiming that it was the dog shit capital of the world ? Well Paris has certainly cleaned up its act since I first came here in 1980.
FM sends her very best wishes to you and Gez too.
LikeLike
Very often those dogs used to be called ‘Fiffi’, rumored to give comfort to lonely divorcees and gay men..
LikeLike
Did you catch the name of the poodle Emm, looks very much like a Christopher.
LikeLike
Hi Algy. No, and in truth the one in the photo is far better dressed than the one that dropped the clangers in front of the Ritz 🙂
LikeLike
Very nicely told.
LikeLike
Thanks, Viv.
Restaurant comment: Last night FM and I were supposed to meet Fern and Godfrey at Chez Julien’s for dinner. It was a comedy of errors to rival the best French farce. We had spent the day with them – visiting the lovely and very impressive Musee Marmoset (or some such like) with many of the smaller Monet water lillies. Dropped in at le Bon Marche ater lunch and then split – they back to their hotel in the sixth and we back to the apartment in the 4th.
I had made the booking weeks ago but I looked up the address from Fern’s Emailed itinerary. Sadly she had put in the address of one of the two Chez Julien’s that were not the one I booked. So when FM and I showed up at Chez Julien A (in the 5th), there was no booking and there was no Fern and Godfrey. So I phoned her. No answer. So I phoned Chez Julien B – there WAS my booking but nobody had showed up. Meanwhile, Fern, who had cleverly left her phone back in the hotel and who had shown up at Chez Julien A before we had gotten there, found no booking and no available seats and in a panic headed off to Chez Julien C (in the 10th) in a Taxi. Of course we were still at Chez Julien A where four seats had miraculously appeared waiting….. waiting waiting …. to hear from Fern who, by this stage we felt must surely be at the bottom of the Seine. Chez Julien C is a dreadful place in a dodgy neighbourhood and so Fern and Godfrey took the taxi back to their hotel in the 6th and found on her phone a million messages from me (via Australia) ….. By that stage, FM and I had ordered and eaten the entree at Chex Julien A and Fern and Godfrey (who are heading off to the south today) were past catching up and had dinner near their hotel – at another table dined a POODLE. Then another poodle couple showed up at Chez Julien A.
It was that kind of evening.
LikeLike
Geez Emm, that’s worse than my boeuf tartare debacle at Montpellier so many years ago with H, including the raw egg. (I’ll have mine done rare SVP!)
LikeLike
OMG. I’ve just tuned in here. Was this organised by The ALP, by any chance?
Sounds like some of their Farragoism.
Presumably your friends have ‘real names’, like you (Emmjay) Effcee and GeeBee? 😉
Keep up the good work: French kissing; French letters & frogs.
BTW, download an app called ‘Shazam, for your iPhone. Every time you here a French tune that you like switch it on and it will tell you the song…Ooo la la..Oh oh oh oh oh.
LikeLike
Well, Jules, I think Fern and Godfrey would be mortified if they thought you saw them as card carriers for the ALP. Blue ribbon Fatty O’Barrell supporters. They think that John Howard was too soft on the weak, poor and ignorant and I’m sure Godfrey leads harpooning expedition hunting down boat people. On land too !
LikeLike
I had a similar stuff up in the south of Spain many years ago. The lost ones eventually found us at about 1 am when they finally spotted my little Ford Anglia. We had no phones in those days. We left notes all over the place.
LikeLike
Emmjay, you should have been a nurse, you tell such terrific poo stories.
LikeLike
How about some info on the cultural habits of the French at the supermarkets, especially at the delicatessen section.
I bet the shop girls don’t shove their hands inside plastic bags to grab the pre- sliced salami or ham and then to smash it into an unrecognisable lump of something.
LikeLike
Thanks, Big – I guess somebody has to poo it. Has Fodge been talking to you recently. He’s gone all quiet with us ? I suspect a love interest.
LikeLike
He’s been out of the house a lot, lately, then, of course, there’s been some manual labour round the place, well, you know what he’s like!
LikeLike