It’s a peaceful setting. The fall day that we visited wassunny and quite pleasant, and the stroll in the Cimetière du Père-Lachaise in Paris was lovely. Messier rests in a nice neighborhood, just a few meters from Frédéric Chopin, though his grave is much simpler than Chopin’s. Compared to the grave of the much more famous resident across the hill (who said, appropriately, “No one here gets out alive”), Messier’s grave had many fewer visitors, too. My wife and I were there by ourselves.
Visiting the URL on the plaque (
https://www.galactic-hunter.com/post/help-us-renovate-charles-messier-s-grave-for-the-next-100-years), it appears that the grave was quite neglected until just a few years ago, when some appreciative amateur astronomers stepped up to care for it for many years to come. I appreciate their efforts, but it seems a shame not to include on the plaque the man’s life work in finding comets. I probably would also have included the nickname King Louis XV gave him, “Ferret of Comets” (thanks Wikipedia).