(A) Zbąszyń, 4:25/4:34. Bruno Schulz crosses the border of the Republic of Poland and the Third Reich.
(B) Aachen, 3:50 pm, Bruno Schulz crosses the border of France.
(C) Paris, Gare du Nord, 9:36 pm. Bruno Schulz arrives in Paris and stops at L’Hôtel d”Orient at 43 rue l’Abbé Gregoire.
(A) According to the timetable, the train’s check-in in Zbąszyń took 45 minutes; on the German side in Neu Bentschen the train stayed usually 34 minutes, which were devoted to customs and passport control.
(B) The train route ran through the capital of the Third Reich (Berlin Schlesischer Bahnhof – 7:43, Bahnhof Berlin Friedrichstrasse – 8:00). Schulz’s transit through Nazi Germany lasted about 11 hours.
(C) Trains from Northeast were arriving at Gare du Nord. It is not known if Schulz was expected on the platform. Wiesław Budzyński suspects that it Georges Rosenberg* or Ludwik Lille*1 might have waited for him there. It is not certain, though. Schulz’s meetings with them are confirmed in many documents, but they seem to have happened later2. It is therefore possible that Schulz’s first guide in Paris was someone else. It seems that the newcomer from Drohobych, although quite familiar with Vienna and also a little bit with Berlin, would not be able to cope in the city where he came for the first time with no knowledge of the language, without the help of a local. This someone must have helped Schulz reach a hotel on the other side of the Seine about five kilometres from the station. Who knows if it was him, the unnamed helper, who booked the room in advance. Staying at L’Hôtel d’Orient, Schulz did not act on the advice that Kazimiera Rychterówna* gave him in a letter from June* to stay at the Liberia or Pasteur3 hotel, and it is difficult to claim that he accidentally arrived late in the evening at a hotel so far from the station. The choice of the place of residence was not accidental. L’Hôtel d’Orient was in the Montparnasse district, where many people whom Schulz intended to meet lived. The preserved hotel bill shows that he spent his first night in Paris in room number 3. (sr) (transl. mw)