The 'Topographical Evolution of the City of Paris 
68 
43 
62 
63 
49 
30 
61 
64 
6 
*9 
KEY TO MAE 
Archives Nationales 
Banque de France 
Bois de Boulogne 
Bois de Vincennes 
Champ de Mars 
Cathedral of Notre-Dame 
Cimetiere du Mont Par- 
nasse 
Cimetiere du Pere-La- 
chaise 
Cimetiere Montmartre 
Church of St. Eustache 
Church of St. Germain- 
des-Pres 
Church of St. Etienne du 
Mont 
Church of Notre-Dame- 
des-Champs 
Church of St. Germain- 
P Auxerrois 
Church of St. Sulpice 
Church of St. Gervais 
Ecole Militaire 
Ecole des Beaux-Arts 
Eiffel Tower 
Gare de l'Est 
Gare du Nord 
Halles Centrales 
Hopital du Val-de-Grace 
Hotel de Ville 
Hotel Dieu 
Hotel du Cluny 
Hotel des Invalides 
Hotel Monnaies 
L’lnstitut 
L’ Arc de V Etoile 
Legion d’Honneur 
La Villette 
Marche au Fleurs 
Marche du Temple 
Notre-Dame des Blancs 
Manteaux 
Oratoire 
Opera 
Observatoire 
Palais des Beaux-Arts 
Palais Royal 
Palais Bourbon (Hotel du 
Corps Legislatif) 
Palais de Justice and the 
Sainte Chapelle 
Palace and Gardens of 
the Luxembourg 
Parc des Buttes Chau- 
mont 
not the Revolu¬ 
tion, but an acci¬ 
dent in its course. 
'To the Frenchman 
the Revolution is 
a prolonged and 
powerful move¬ 
ment toward the 
2 3 
3 1 
39 
48 
18 
33 
59 
60 
24 
3 
5 
11 
28 
47 
56 
2 5 
8 
46 
54 
20 
40 
41 
66 
4 
26 
66 
44 
57 
enthronement of Common-sense, or, as he 
calls it, “ R eason,” in the conduct of human 
affairs. Even in France its work is not yet 
quite done, although the end is in sight. 
To the Revolution in this larger, proper 
sense civic improvement means better streets, 
straighter streets, more light, more air, more 
water, decent markets, abattoirs and ceme¬ 
teries, rational hospitals and prisons, and, in 
general, the doing of the right thing in the 
right way. All these matters have been at¬ 
tended to in Paris by men acting under the 
276 
