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Eiffel tower
By Edward Said
Monday, February 12, 2001
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The story is told of the celebrated writer Guy de Maupassant, who shortly after the Eiffel Tower was built in mid-19th-century Paris, would go around the city complaining endlessly about how much he disliked the great structure. And yet, he would nevertheless unfailingly go to the Tower's restaurant for lunch every single day. When his attention was drawn to the paradox in his behavior, Maupassant coolly answered: "I go there because being inside it is the only place in Paris where you don't actually have to look at or even see the Tower."
about the tower (Encarta)
Eiffel Tower, wrought-iron tower in Paris, a landmark and an early example of wrought-iron construction on a gigantic scale. It was designed and built by the French civil engineer Alexandre Gustave Eiffel for the Paris World's Fair of 1889. The tower, without its modern broadcasting antennae, is 300 m (984 ft) high. The lower section consists of four immense arched legs set on masonry piers. The legs curve inward until they unite in a single tapered tower. Platforms, each with an observation deck, are at three levels; on the first is also a restaurant. The tower, constructed of about 6300 metric tons (about 7000 tons) of iron, has stairs and elevators. A meteorological station, a radio communications station, and a television transmission antenna, as well as a suite of rooms that were used by Eiffel, are located near the top of the tower.
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