oves of their use, iv. 190.
PARIS AND SUBURBS,
account of them in Johnson's Journal, ii. 389-99;
Austin Nuns, ii. 392;
_Avantcoureur_, ii. 398;
Bastille, ii. 396;
'beastliest town in the universe,' ii. 403, n. 1;
beer and brewers, ii. 396;
Benedictine friars, ii. 385, 390. 397, 399, 402; iii. 286; iv. 411;
boulevards, ii. 393;
chairs made of painted boards, ii. 395;
chambre de question, ii. 393;
Chatlois (Chatelet), Hotel de, ii. 389, 390;
Choisi, ii. 392;
Colosseum, ii. 394;
Conciergerie, ii. 392, n, 2;
Court at Fontainebleau, ii. 394;
its slovenliness, ii. 395;
at Versailles, v. 276;
Courts of Justice, ii. 391, 395;
_Ecole Militaire_, ii. 389, 402;
_Enfans trouves_, ii. 398;
Fathers of the Oratory, ii. 389;
fire first lighted on Oct. 27, ii. 397;
foot-ways, ii. 394, n. 3;
Gobelins, ii. 390; v. 107;
Grand Chartreux, ii. 398;
Greve, ii. 396;
Hebrides, in novelties inferior to the, ii. 387;
horses and saddles, ii. 395;
Hospitals, ii. 390;
Johnson saw little society, ii. 385;
killed, number of people, ii. 393;
Library, King's, ii. 397;
_London_, mentioned in, i. 119;
looking-glass factory, ii. 396;
Louvre, ii. 394;
low Parisians described by Mrs. Piozzi, v. 106, n. 4;
Luxembourg, ii. 398;
mean people only walk, ii. 394;
Meudon, ii. 397;
Observatory, ii. 389;
_Palais Bourbon_, ii. 393, 394;
_Palais Marchand_, ii. 391, 393;
_Palais Royal_, ii. 392;
payments, ii. 393; 396, 398;
_Place de Vendome_, ii. 390;
_Pont tournant_, ii. 392;
revival of letters, iii. 254;
roads near Paris empty, ii. 393;
Sansterre's brewery, ii. 396;
_Sellette_, ii. 392;
sentimentalists, iii. 149, n. 2;
Sevres, ii. 395, 397;
shops, mean, ii. 402;
sinking table, ii. 392;
society, compared with London for, iii. 253;
Sorbonne, ii. 397, 399; v. 406;
St. Cloud, ii. 397;
St. Denis, ii. 399;
St. Eustatia, ii. 398;
St. Germain, ii. 399;
St. Roque, ii. 390;
Sundays, ii. 394;
_Tournelle_, ii. 393;
Trianon, ii. 395;
Tuilleries, ii. 392, 394; iv. 282, n. 2;
University, i. 321, n. 6; v. 91, n. 1;
_Valet de place_, ii. 398.
_Parisenus and Parismenus_, iv. 8, n. 3.
PARISH, co-extensive with the manor, ii. 243;
compels men to find security for the maintenance of their family,
iii. 287;
election of ministers, ii. 244;
neglected ones, iii. 437.
PARISH-CLERKS, iv. 125.
PARKER, Chief Baron, i
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