House and Garden 
32 Fare Monceaux 
I 2 Place du Carrousel 
Place des Vosges 
Place Vendome 
27 Place St. Michel 
34 Place Maubert 
3 3 Place de la Concorde 
36 Place de la Ville-F- 
Eveque 
42 Place des Victoires 
50 Place des Ternes 
Place de Clichy 
Place Dauphine 
54 Place de Daumesnil 
58 Place de la Republique 
5 5 Place and Palace du Troc- 
adero 
45 Place and Theatre Fran- 
qais 
69 Pont National 
Pont de Tolbiac 
Pont de Bercy 
Pont d’Austerlitz 
Pont Sully 
1 3 
■4 
5 ' 
5 2 
domination of that accumulated sensibility 
which the French people inherit from two 
thousand years of artistic history. 
The First Republic itself, which we call 
the Revolution, did not accomplish much 
for Paris. It destroyed the Bastille with 
70 
71 
7 2 
73 
74 Pont de la Tournelle 
75 Pont Marie 
76 Pont Louis Philippe 
77 Pont St. Louis 
78 Pont d’Arcole 
79 Pont au Double 
80 Pont Notre-Dame 
8 1 Petit Pont 
82 Pont au Change 
83 Pont St. Michel 
84, 85 Pont Neuf 
86 Pont des Arts 
87 Pont du Carrousel 
88 Pont Royal 
89 Pont de Solferino 
90 Pont de la Concorde 
91 Pont Alexandre 111 . 
92 Pont des Invalides 
93 Pont de l’Alma 
94 Pont de Jena 
95 Pont de Passy 
Pont de Grenelle 
Pont Mirabeau 
Pont d’Auteuil 
65 Sacre Cceur de Mont¬ 
martre 
The Louvre 
The Bourse 
16 The Pantheon 
1 7 The Sorbonne 
29 Tour de St. Jacques 
37 The Madelaine 
38 Tuileries Gardens 
tremendous to-do 
and planned a col¬ 
umn and square to 
replace it similar 
to those actually 
executed ; but the 
Bastille was already 
doomed ; the king 
would have removed it in a few years if 
the mob had not; the inner boulevard had 
been completed up to this point on both 
sides ; the Bastille had become an obstruc¬ 
tion which had to go. 
The First Republic re-drew the plan of 
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97 
98 
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