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In Paris, 'love locks' conquer all, even City Hall

 
Published on Aug 20, 2012
11:26 AM
A file picture taken on April 16, 2010 in Paris, shows love locks attached to a fence by lovers on the "Pont des Arts" bridge. They say you can't beat City Hall, but Paris authorities who once took a dim view of the thousands of "love locks" adorning the bridges of the Seine river have had a change of heart. -- PHOTO: AFP

PARIS (AFP) - They say you can't beat City Hall, but Paris authorities who once took a dim view of the thousands of "love locks" adorning the bridges of the Seine river have had a change of heart.

"We are letting the phenomenon be, looking at it with benevolence," City Hall spokesman Damien Steffan told AFP with a Gallic shrug. "It's not a problem for us." The custom of attaching padlocks to bridge railings, fences or other public fixtures as a way for couples to pledge their undying love is of uncertain origin, but many link it to a 2006 novel, Ho Voglia Di Te (I Want You), by Italian author Federico Moccia.

In it, two lovers attach a padlock engraved with their names to a lamppost on the Ponte Milvio in northern Rome, then throw the key into the River Tiber.

What could be more romantic than attaching a love lock to the Pont des Arts, the footbridge that crosses the Seine from the Left Bank to the Louvre? Or to the Pont de l'Archeveche, in the shadow of Notre Dame Cathedral? Most couples throw away the key, but some hang on to them as keepsakes for their children.

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