Organ—Saint-Sulpice
170 |
CHAPTER XXVI. |
PRINTING IN PARIS—THE CENSORSHIP. |
Rue Visconti—Historical Buildings—The National School of Roads and Bridges—The Introduction of Printing into Paris—The First Printing Establishments—The Censorship |
174 |
CHAPTER XXVII. |
THE HÔTEL DES INVALIDES. |
A Glance at its History—Louis XIV. and Mme. de Maintenon—The Pensioners—Their Characteristics and Mode of Life |
185 |
CHAPTER XXVIII. |
SOME MORE PARIS HOSPITALS. |
The French Hospital System—The Laënnec Hospital—The Houses of Assistance—The Quinze-Vingts—Deaf and Dumb Institutions—The Abbé de l’Épée—La Charité |
193 |
CHAPTER XXIX. |
LUNATIC ASYLUMS AND MIXED INSTITUTIONS. |
The Treatment of Lunacy in the Past—La Salpêtrière—Bicêtre—The Story of Latude—The Four Sergeants of La Rochelle—Pinel’s Reforms—Charenton |
207 |
CHAPTER XXX. |
THE RIVER BIÈVRE AND THE MANUFACTORY OF THE GOBELINS. |
The Brothers Gobelin—Lebrun—The Gobelins under Louis XIV.—At the Time of the Revolution—The Manufactory of Sèvres |
225 |
CHAPTER XXXI. |
THE PALAIS BOURBON. |
The Palais Bourbon—Its History—The National Convention—Philippe Égalité |
231 |
CHAPTER XXXII. |
SOME HISTORICAL RESIDENCES. |
The Palace of the Legion of Honour—The Ministry of War—The Rue de Grenelle—Talleyrand |
236 |
CHAPTER XXXIII. |
THE RUE TARANNE AND DIDEROT. |
Diderot’s Early Life in Paris—His Love Affairs—Imprisonment in the Château de Vincennes—Diderot and Catherine II. of Russia—His Death |
242 |
CHAPTER XXXIV. |
MONSEIGNEUR AFFRE AND THE INSURRECTION OF JUNE. |
The Courtyard of the Dragon—The National Workshops—The Insurrection of June—Monseigneur Affre Shot at the Barricade of the Faubourg St. Antoine |
247 |
CHAPTER XXXV. |
SOME OCCUPANTS OF MONTPARNASSE. |
The Boulevard Montparnasse—The Cemetery—Father Loriquet—Hégésippe Moreau—Sainte-Beuve |
250 |
CHAPTER XXXVI. |
SPORTS AND DIVERSIONS. |
Le “Sport”—Longchamps—Versailles Races—Fontainebleau—The Seine—Swimming Baths—The Art of Book-collecting |
254 |
CHAPTER XXXVII. |
FENCING SCHOOLS. |
Fencing in France—A National Art—Some Extracts from the Writings of M. Legouvé, One of its Chief Exponents—The Old Style of Fencing and the New |
257 |
CHAPTER XXXVIII. |
PETTY TRADES. |
Petty Trades—Their Origins—The Day-Banker—The Guardian Angel—The Old-Clothesman—The Claque—Its First Beginning and Development |
259 |
CHAPTER XXXIX. |
OBSOLETE PARIS SHOPS. |
The Old Wooden Stalls of Forty Years Ago—The “Lucky Fork”—The Cobbler’ Shops—The Old Cafés |
265 |
CHAPTER XL. |
THE PARIS PRESS. |
French Governments and the Press—The Press under Napoleon—Some Account of the Leading Paris Papers—The Figaro |
268 |
CHAPTER XLI. |
FROM THE QUAI VOLTAIRE TO THE PANTHÉON. |
The Quai Voltaire—Its Changes of Name—Voltaire—His Life in Paris and Elsewhere—His Remains laid in the Panthéon—Mirabeau—Rousseau—Vincennes |
273 |
CHAPTER XLII. |
THE PALAIS MAZARIN AND THE RUE MAZARINE. |
The Institute or Palais Mazarin—The Rue Mazarine—L’Illustre Théâtre—Molière—The Theatre Français—The Odéon—Heine—The Faubourg Saint-Germain—Historical Associations |
288 |
CHAPTER XLIII. |
THE PARIS RIVER AND PARIS COMMERCE. |
The Society of the Water-Merchants of Paris—The Navigation of the Seine—The Paris Slaughter-Houses—Records of Famine in France—The Lot of the French Peasant in the Last Century—The Paris Food Supply |
307 |
CHAPTER XLIV. |
THE BARRIERS—PARISIAN CRIME. |
The Approaches to Paris—The French Railway System—The St. Germain Railway—The Erection of the Barriers—Some of the most famous Barriers—Parisian Crime—Its Special Characteristics |
317 |
CHAPTER XLV. |
PARISIAN MENDICANCY—THE PARIS POOR. |
Parisian Mendicancy in the Sixteenth Century—The General Hospital—Louis XV. and the Beggars—The Revolution—Mendicancy as a Regular Profession—The Organ-grinders and the Trade in Italian Children—The French Treatment of the Poor—Asylums, Almshouses, and Retreats—The Droit des Pauvres—The Cost of the Poor |
324 |
CHAPTER XLVI. |
VERSAILLES. |
Derivation of the Name—Saint-Simon’s Description—Louis XIV.—The Grand Fête of July, 1668—Peter the Great and the Regent—Louis XV.—Marie Antoinette and the “Affair of the Necklace”—The Events of October, 1789 |
338 |
CHAPTER XLVII. |
VERSAILLES AND THE SIEGE OF PARIS. |
The Advance on Paris—Preparations for the Siege—General Trochu—The Francs-Tireurs—The Siege |
348 |
CHAPTER XLVIII. |
VERSAILLES AND THE COMMUNE. |
The Communists or Communards—The “Internationale”—Bismarck and the National Guard—The Municipal Elections—The Insurrection—Thiers—Paris during the Commune—Concluding Remarks |
355 |
INDEX: A, B, C, D, E,
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