TO VIENNA, AND PARIS. 41 1 
of lodging several families in the same building, chap. 
the houses, in loftiness and i 
externally so many palaces. 
V. 
the houses, in loftiness and magnitude, resemble . 
And now, having brought our readers to condud- 
Vienna, we shall here leave them; pursuing, taUo^s.^^*^' 
without observation, the rest of our journey, 
through Germany and France, to England. Other 
writers have anticipated our description of this 
part of the European Continent; and the Second 
Part of the author's Travels has been already 
extended to its due length. It shall suffice 
therefore to add, that, after remaining in Vienna 
until the middle of July, where we collected 
many valuable books, and soqie manuscripts of 
classic authors, we hastened, by the way of 
Munich, Augsburg, and Strashurg, to Paris. Paris. 
Here we had an interview with Napoleon 
Buonaparte. It was granted to us by that 
extraordinary man, in consequence of the kind- 
ness shewn by the author's late brother. Captain 
George Clarke, when commander of the Braakel, 
to a part of the French army which he convoyed 
from Egypt to Marseilles". In Paris we became 
acquainted with several Members of the Institute; 
and constantly attended the Public Lectures of 
(2) See Vol. V. of these Travels, Chap. I. p. 28. Octavo Edition. 
