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My object has been to add somewhat to the general reader's knowledge of Paris and the Parisians,--of the people and the places, whose social laws are the general guide of the civilized world. [Illustration: CHURCH OF ST. SULSPICE.] CONTENTS. CHAPTER I. LONDON TO PARIS, HISTORY OF PARIS, CHAPTER II. RESTAURANTS, A WALK AND GOSSIP, THE BOURSE, CHAPTER III. LAFAYETTE'S TOMB, THE RADICAL, A COUNTRY WALK, CHAPTER IV. THE CHURCHES, NOTRE DAME, L'AUXERROIS, SAINT CHAPELLE, EXPIATOIRE, MADELEINE, ST. FERDINAND, VINCENT DE PAUL, &C. CHAPTER V. LAMARTINE, VERNET, GIRARDIN, HUGO, JANIN, CHAPTER VI. PLACES OF BLOOD, PLACE DE LA CONCORDE, CHAPTER VII. THE LOUVRE, PUBLIC GARDENS, THE LUXEMBOURG PALACE AND GARDENS, THE GOBELINS, CHAPTER VIII. THE PEOPLE, CLIMATE, PUBLIC INSTITUTIONS, HOTEL DE INVALIDES, JARDIN D'HIVER, CHAPTER IX. M. GUIZOT, ALEXANDER DUMAS, EUGENE SUE, M. THIERS, GEORGE SAND, CHAPTER X. PERE LA CHASE, THE PRISONS, FOUNDLING HOSPITALS, CHARITABLE INSTITUTIONS, LA MORGUE, NAPOLEON AND EUGENIA, THE BAPTISM OF THE PRINCE, CHAPTER XI. MEN OF THE PAST, THE FATHER OF FRENCH TRAGEDY, THE GREAT JESTER, THE DRAMATIST, CHAPTER XII. THE FABULIST, THE INFIDEL, THE GREAT COMIC WRITER, WHAT I SAW IN PARIS. CHAPTER I. LONDON TO PARIS--HISTORY OF PARIS. LONDON TO PARIS. Few people now-a-days go direct to Paris from America. They land in Liverpool, get at least a birds-eye view of the country parts of England, stay in London a week or two, or longer, and then cross the channel for Paris. The traveler who intends to wander over the continent, here takes his initiatory lesson in the system of passports. I first called upon the American minister, and my passport--made out in Washington--was _vise_ for Paris. My next step was to hunt up the French consul, and pay him a dollar for affixing his signature to the precious document. At the first sea-port this passport was taken from me, and a provisional one put into my keeping. At Paris the original one was returned! And this is a history of my passport between London and Paris, a distance traversed in a few hours. If such are the practices between two of the greatest and most civilized towns on the face of the earth, how unendurable must they be on the more de
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