all his men, 510; arrives at the camp 
at Charleroy, and has the command of 
the left wing, 531; mortified at being 
deprived of part of his force, 533 ; at 
Waterloo, 54a ; commands the final 
attack with the referve of the guards, 
544; his trial, 586; and prompt exe¬ 
cution, 587; prejudged, 588. 
Ninety-fecond regiment of Britilh infantry, 
greatly diftinguilhed at Quatre-Bras, 533. 
Noblefie of the prefent day, 449. 
Nogent fur Marne, 498. 
Noify le Sec, 498. 
Normal Schools, 468. 
Normans, ravage the city of Paris, 445, 6. 
Notaries, their employment, as diftin¬ 
guilhed from that of attorneys, 460, 1. 
Notre Dame, cathedral of, 470. 
Nurfing-eftablilhmenr, 480, 
Obfervatories, fix in number, at Paris, 466. 
Odeon, one of the minor theatres, 484. 
Olympic Circus, 484. 
Opera-houfe at Paris, 483. 
Opera Buft'a and Opera Comique, 484. 
Paintings in the Gallery of the Louvre, 
„ 454 - 
Palais Archiepifcopal, 471. 
— — des Beaux Arts, 462. 
-Bourbon, Houfe of Commons, 459. 
-d’Elifee Bourbon, 468. 
-de Juftice, 445, 460. 
• -de la Legion d’Honneur, 46S, 9. 
-- du Louvre, 450. 
- du Luxembourg, 458. 
--du Roi de Rome, 448. 
—- Royal, 450, 456 ; its library, 460. 
~ du Temple, 461. 
-des Thermes, 444, 447, 469. 
' des Tuileries, 451, 2. 
Pantheon, or church of St. Genevieve, 473. 
Paper-hangings, 491. 
Paris, derivation and early hiftory, 444; 
fucceflive improvements to the time of 
Napoleon, 445 ; extent, population, di. 
vifions, &c. 446 ; antiquities, houfes, 
ftreets, lamps, See. 447 ; hackney- 
coaches and boats, foil and climate, com- 
parifon between Paris and London, 448 ; 
charadter and manners, 449 ; of the wo¬ 
men, 4505 palaces, 451; fcientific in- 
ftitutions, 462; civic buildings, 469; 
churches, 470 ; convents, 473 ; quarries, 
474 > 5 5 catacombs and cemeteries, 475, 
6 ; charities, 479 ; the poor, 482 ; 
places ofamufement, 482; bridges, 486; 
quays, aquedudts, and canals, 487 ; foun¬ 
tains, 488; markets, 489; gates, 490; 
manufadtures and commerce, 490 ; inte- 
refting objedts in the environs, 491-500; 
political hiftory fince the year 1814, in¬ 
cluding Napoleon’s return, Louis’s flight, 
and return, See. See. 500-592. 
Paris, the fon of Priam, 442, 444. 
Pally, a village near Paris, 494. 
Philanthropic Societies, 482. 
Philip Auguftus, firft furrounded Paris with 
walls, 445. 
Philip Egalite, duke of Orleans, 456 ; turns 
the Palais Royal into a bazar, 457. 
Pidton, fir Thomas, 531 ; killed, 540. 
Pierrefitte, feven miles from Paris, 499. 
Place du Caroufel, 451, 2. 
• - du Chatelet, 461, 2. 
- de Greve, 469. 
- Louis Quinze, 452, 455. 
• - Vendome, 452. 
— — des Vidtoires, 458. 
Plaller of Paris, 446. 
Police, ftridtnefs of, 448, 461 ; in Italy, 
449. 
Polytechnic School, 467, 8. 
Vo l. XVIII. No. 1282. 
PARIS. 
Ponfonby, fir Win. killed at Waterloo, 541. 
Pont des Arts, 462. 
—— d’Aufterlitz, ou du Jardin, 486. 
-- au Change, 461. 
-- des Invalides, or Jena, 486. 
— Louis Seize, 456. 
-Marie, 486. 
-St. Michel, 462. 
-Neuf, 486. 
■ — Notre Dame, 486. 
- Petit, very ancient, 486. 
-Royal, 455. 
-- de la Tournelle, 486. 
Poultry-markets, 489. 
Poufiin, his works in the Gallery of the 
Louvre, 454. 
Printing-office, royal, 470. 
Prifons, 261. 
Proftitutes, licenfed by the government, 
45 «- 
Proteft of the bmp refs Maria-Louifa, 501. 
Provifional government, formed after Na¬ 
poleon’s abdication, 552; its diflolution, 
557 , 8. 
Pruffians, repulfed at Fleurus, 531 ; de¬ 
feated at Ligny, 533 ; forced to retreat, 
534; extraordinary antipathy between 
them and the French, 535 ; their pofi- 
tion at the battle of Waterloo, 538, 9 ; 
fight defperately, 542 ; neither give nor 
receive quarter, 544, 5 ; purfue the fly¬ 
ing army, 546, 7; their favage beha¬ 
viour contrafted with that of the Eng- 
liih, 553; (trip the Louvre, 576; reco¬ 
ver their territory, 580. 
Puteaux and its gardens, 498. 
Quarries underneath Paris, their alarming 
ftate before they were converted into ca¬ 
tacombs, 475. 
Quatre Bras, 531; battle of, 532, remarks 
on, 534, 5. 
Quays, 487. 
Richelieu, cardinal, the builder of the Pa¬ 
lais Royal, 456; duke of, his grandfon, 
becomes prime minifter, 581 ; communi¬ 
cates the hard terms of peace to the 
chambers, 534. 
Kind and its neighbourhood, 498. 
Romans, their works in Paris, 444. 
Royal Academy, name reftored, 462. 
Royal College of France, 467. 
Royal Court, in the Palais de Juftice, 460. 
Royal Library, 462. 
Ruelle, feven miles from Paris. 496, 7. 
Runges, a fmall village, 497. 
St. Cloud, palace of, 494, 5. 
St. Cyr, 466. 
St. Denis, gate of, 490 ; town, 499. 
Sc. Etienne du Mont, 471. 
St. Euftache and St. Franjois Xavier, 472. 
St. Genevieve,abbey of, 471 ; church, 472. 
St. Germain l’Auxerrois, 455. 
- ■ ■ - - -r-’s Market, 489. 
■ ■ -des Pies, church of, 471. 
St. Gervais, church of, 469 ; the village, 
498. 
St. Jaques, church of, 472. 
St. Laurence, in the catacombs, 477. 
St. Lazare, a prifon for women, 461. 
St. Louis and St. Paul, 47 c. 
St. Maur, village of, 497. 
St. Merry, church or, 471. 
St. Nicolas du Chardonnec, 472. 
St. Ouen fur Seine, 499. 
St Pelagie, prifon of, 461. 
St. Philippe du Roule, 472. 
St. Roch, church of, 472. 
St. Sulpice, near the Luxembourg, 459. 
Sainte Chapelle, at the Palaisde Juftice, 460. 
Sardinia, unfuccefsful in her application 
for the reftoradon of fome pictures, 578. 
9 P 
789 
Safs’s eulogy of Paris, 448 ; of the French 
charadter as compared with the Italian, 
449. . 
Sceaux and its fetes, 497. 
School of Medicine and Surgery, 467. 
Sculpture in the Gallery of the Louvre, 
454 . 5 - 
Seine, the river which interfedts Paris, 446. 
Skaiting, a new diverfion, 488. 
Slave-trade abolifhed by Napoleon, 517. 
Slaughter-houfes, not within the city, 490. 
Society for encouraging National [nduftry, 
492. 
Soil and climate, 448. 
Solignac, general, perfuades Napoleon to 
abdicate the fecond time, 551, 2. 
Sorbonne, chapel of the, 472, 
Soult, duke of Dalmatia, his addrefs to the 
army, 529; deprived of the command, 
5 . 53 - 
Spain recovers fome pidtures from the 
French, 577; gains a conftitution, 581. 
Spedtacle inftrudtif, 4S5. 
Spirit, diftilled from potatoes, 491. 
Stains, eight miles from Paris, 499. 
St one-quarries near Paris, 446. 
Suchet, his operations in Italy before and 
after the battle of Waterloo, 559 ; forced 
to retire behind the Loire, 560; his army 
fubmits, 561. 
Surenne, a village, 498. 
Sweden, the only exception to the reftora- 
tion of the rightful king, 581. 
Talleyrand, 566; his talents acknowledged, 
567; difmiffed from the miniftry, 581; 
his remark on royal interference in elec¬ 
tions, 591. 
Temple prifon, 461. 
Theatres and other places of amufementf, 
450 ; morality of, 482, j ; regulations, 
483 - 
Theatre de Bienfaifance, 484. 
-- Feydeau, 484. 
-Franfais, 483. 
■- de Gaiete, 484. 
•-des Italiens, 484. 
-Mecanique, 484. 
-de la Poite St. Martin, 484. 
—-des Varietes, 484. 
--de Vaudeville, 484. 
Thicknefle’s defeription of burials at Paris, 
474 ; corredted, 475. 
Tliielrnan, confequences of his engagement 
with the corps of Grouchy, 544. 
Tivoli, the French Vauxhall, 485. 
Town-hall, 469. 
’I ravelling in France and in Italy, 449. 
Treaty of Perfonal Safety, between the 
Allied Powers and the Emperor Napo¬ 
leon, on the nth of April, 1814, 500, 
I ; of Vienna, June 1815, 580, 1; defi¬ 
nitive, between France and the Allies, 
Nov. 20, 1815, 582, 3. 
Trianon, Great and Little, 496. 
Triumphal arch at the Tuileries, 452 ; de- 
fpoiled of the horfes, 579. 
Triumphal column in the Place Vendo r,e, 
45 z ; 
Tuileries, begun by Catharine de Medicis, 
and completed by Louis XIV. 451 ; tri¬ 
umphal arch and garden, 452. 
Vauolanc, M. de, 581. 
Veroncle, his Marriage at Cana, 454. 
Verfailles, 495 ; park and gardens, 496. 
Veterinary fcitool, -3 63 
Vincennes, and its <Vood, 498. 
Vineuii and their allies gam a victory over 
the wild beafts at Chantilly, 499, 500?*^ 
Vitry, fix miles from Paris, 497. 
Univerficy of France, 466, its colleges, 
467. 
U xbridge, 
