EPILOGUE.

SOON after my return to London the two following paragraphs appeared in the newspapers.

"T. has been over to France, botanizing, and has gotten what he went to seek.""I'll tell you, my Lord Fool, From this Nettle danger we pluck theFlowersafety."

"T. has been over to France, botanizing, and has gotten what he went to seek."

"I'll tell you, my Lord Fool, From this Nettle danger we pluck theFlowersafety."

This I insert merely on account of the Bêtise of the quotation. The Dutch inscription on sticks of sealing-wax would have been as applicable.

"T. the Tourist was the first to fly from Paris on the prospect of the tumults of the 10th of August. He is now writing a History of the Bloody Murders which distinguished that day."

"T. the Tourist was the first to fly from Paris on the prospect of the tumults of the 10th of August. He is now writing a History of the Bloody Murders which distinguished that day."

I suspect that the ingenious Genius who wrote this knew he was mistaking as to the former part of this paragraph. He may sayTrippistnow.

I should not have seen either of these, had they not been pointed out to me by some of my "damned good-natured friends." I am in hopes of seeing a number of very pretty criticisms on the foregoing pages; many passages were written purposely to catch critics, as honey catches gnats; if just, theyshall be attended to, should there be another edition; and if they are merely absurd, they shall be collected, and faithfully presented to the gentle reader. I have told the truth, and have not "set down aught in malice."

THE END.

*** There are a few trifling typographical errors in the foregoing sheets, which I shall leave to the correction of the reader, as not one of them affects the sense.

FOOTNOTES:[1]A post is about two leagues, or between four and six miles, as the posthouses are not exactly at the same distance from each other.[2]It is about five square miles, or rather, eight miles in length from two to four miles in breadth.[3]This was written after I had become familiarized to pikes.[4]TheRotunda D'Orleans, in this wall, at the back of the gardens of theci-devantDuke of that name is worthy of observation.[5]In 1788 the school was suppressed, the scholars were placed in the army, or in country colleges, and the building is intended, when the necessary alterations are completed, to be one of the four hospitals which are to replace that of theHôtel-Dieu. This hospital is in such a bad situation, being in the midst of Paris, that a quarter of the patients die. It contains only two thousand beds; each of the four new hospitals is to contain twelve hundred beds.[6]There is to be a new coinage without the king's profile, and it is to be hoped these wings, or rather the whole figure, will be left out.[7]This article is, "The law has the right of prohibiting only those actions which are hurtful to society."[8]This and the formerechanger, &c. andremboursable, &c. appear to be superfluous.[9]TheseBoulevartswere made in 1536, and planted with four rows of trees in 1668; these beautiful walks are too well known to be described here; they are 2400Toises(4800 yards, or almost three miles) long. The South Boulevarts are planted in the same manner, were finished in 1761, and are 3683Toises, or fathom (above four miles) in length.[10]Mr. Pennant, in the second volume of his Tour in Scotland, has given a long account of such a machine, from which the following particulars are taken. "It was confined to the limits of the forest of Hardwick, or the eighteen towns and hamlets within its precincts. The execution was generally at Halifax; Twenty five criminals suffered during the reign of Queen Elizabeth; the records before that time were lost. Twelve more were executed between 1623 and 1650, after which it is supposed the privilege was no more exerted.——This machine is now destroyed, but there is one of the same kind, in a room under the Parliament house, at Edinburgh, where it was introduced by the Regent Morton, who took a model of it as he passed through Halifax, and at length suffered by it himself. It is in form of a painters easel, and about ten feet high: at four feet from the bottom is a cross-bar, on which the felon laid his head, which was kept down by another placed above. In the inner edges of the frame are grooves; in these is placed a sharp axe, with a vast weight of lead, supported at the summit by a peg; to that peg is fastened a cord, which the executioner cutting, the axe falls, and beheads the criminal. If he was condemned for stealing a horse or a cow, the string was tied to the beast, which pulled out the peg and became the executioner."[11]Mrs. Robinson tells me, that when she was at Paris, a few years ago, hervalet de place, came early one morning, informing her there would be agrand spectacle, and wanted to know if he should hire a place for her. This superb spectacle was no other than the execution of two murderers, who were to be broken alive on the wheel, in the Place de Grêve, on that day. She however says, that she declined going.[12]Genera plantarum, 798.[13]The seeds which are sold in the London shops, for those of this plant, are those of thehyssopus bracteatis.[14]These trees are planted as close together as possible, hardly eight feet asunder, and no room is left for any walks, so that these gardens are, properly speaking, orange orchards. The oranges were then sold at the rate of ten for a penny English.[15]"In 1701 there were born in Hungary two Girls who were joined together by the loins; they lived above twenty-one years. At seven years old they were shown almost all over Europe; at nine years of age a priest purchased them, and placed them in a convent at Petersburg, where they remained till their death, which happened in 1723. An account of them was found among the papers of the surgeon who attended the convent, and was sent to the Royal Society of London in 1757. In this account we are told, that one of these twins was calledHelen, the otherJudith.Helengrew up and was very handy,Judithwas smaller and a little hump-backed. They were joined together by the reins, and in order to see each other they could turn their heads only. There was one commonanus, and of course there was only one common need of going to stool, but each had her separate urinary passage, and separate wants, which occasioned quarrels, because when the weakest was obliged to evacuate, the strongest, who sometimes would not stand still, pulled her away; they perfectly agreed in every thing else, and appeared to love each other. When they were seen in front, they did not differ apparently from other women. At six years oldJudithlost the use of her left side by a paralytick stroke; she never was perfectly cured, and her mind remained feeble and dull; on the contrary,Helenwas handsome, intelligent and even witty. They had the small-pox and the measles at the same time, but all their other sicknesses indispositions happened to each separately.Judithwas subject to a cough and a fever, whereasHelenwas generally in good health. When they had almost attained the age of twenty-twoJudithcaught a fever, fell into a lethargy and died. PoorHelenwas forced to follow her fate; three minutes before the death ofJudithshe fell into an agony, and died nearly at the same time. When they were dissected it was found, that each had her own entrails perfect, and even, that each had a separate excretory conduit, which however terminated at the sameanus."Linnæushas likewise described this monster. Many figures of double children of different kinds may be seen inLicetus de Monstris, 4to. 1665; and in theMedical Miscellanies, which were printed in Latin at Leipzig, in several quarto volumes, in 1673.[16]Rousseau used to play at chess here almost every day, which attracted such crowds of people to see him, that theLieutenant de Policewas obliged to place a sentinel at the door.[17]The same author has likewise published,Historical Singularitiesof Paris, in a single volume, and a Description of the Environs, in two volumes, 1790.[18]Almost £300,000 sterling, about a tenth part of the Church income of the whole kingdom. The establishment for the Royal Family, or Civil List, is said to have been forty millions of livres. Thus the Religion and the Monarch cost one hundred and ten millions of livres annually (about five millions sterling) the greater part of which sum is now appropriated to other uses. The convents are converted, or perverted, into secular useful buildings, and their inhabitants have been suffered to spend the remainder of their lives in their former idleness, or to marry and mix with society. Annuities have been granted to them from thirty-five to sixty louis per annum, according to their age.[19]1020 feet by 72. Westminster-bridge is 1220 feet long, but only 44 feet wide.[20]The inner diameter of the dome of St. Peter's, at Rome, 138 feet, which is the same size as that of the pantheon in Rome. St. Paul's in London 108. The Invalids in Paris 50.[21]£750 sterling; I know not the present salary.[22]According to theJournal de la seconde legislature,seance de la nuitiiAoût.[23]This is asserted on the authority of all the French newspapers, and of several eye-witnesses. It will never be possible to know the exact truth, for the people here said to be the aggressors are all slain.—These Swiss had trusted that they would have been backed by the National Guard, who, on the contrary, took the part of the people, and fired on the Swiss (who ran into the château as soon as they had discharged their pieces) by which several were killed.[24]The balls did no other damage to the palace than breaking the windows, and leaving impressions in the stones, perhaps an inch in depth.[25]The whole of the foregoing account is taken from verbal information, and from all the French papers that could be procured.[26]Although I was not an eye-witness, I was however an ear-witness of the engagement, being only half a mile distant from it.[27]At the taking of the Bastille, on the day of which only eighty-three persons were killed on the spot, though fifteen died afterwards of their wounds, thesePoissardeswere likewise foremost in bravery and in cruelty, so much, that the Parisians themselves ran away from them as soon as they saw them at a distance. They are armed, some with sabres and others with pikes.[28]These are the words of a French newspaper, called,Journal universel, ou Revolutions des Royaumes, par J. P. Audarin. No. 994, for Sunday, 12 August, 4th year of Liberty, under the motto of Liberty, Patriotism and Truth.[29]This is inserted on the authority of a lady, a native of the French West-India isles, who resided in the same hotel with me, and who, with two gentlemen who attended her, were witnesses to this transaction, which they told to whoever chose to listen.[30]The king was shooting from theLouvre, and theFauxbourgSt.Germainis on the other side of the river.[31]On the 28th of March, 1757,Damiens, who stabbedLewisXV. was executed in thePlace de Grêve, four horses were to pull his arms and legs from his body: they were fifty minutes pulling in vain, and at last his joints were obliged to be cut: he supported these torments patiently, and expired whilst the tendons of his shoulders were cutting, though he was living after his legs and thighs had been torn from his body; his right hand had previously been cut off. I was in Paris in 1768, and then, and at various times since have been assured by eye-witnesses, that almost all the windows of the square where the execution was performed were hired by ladies, at from two to tenlouiseach.Mr. Thicknesse in his "Year's journey through France and Part of Spain," in a letter datedDijon,in Burgundy, 1776, mentions a man whom he saw broke alive on the wheel by, "the executioner andhis mother, who assisted at this horrid business, these both seemed to enjoy the deadly office."I have formerly given an account of the Spanish ladies enjoying the barbarities of the bull-fights.[32]Before, and on the 10th of August, there were not above thirty British travellers in Paris, but after that day, in less than a week it was supposed that above two thousand had from all parts of the kingdom resorted to the capital, in order to obtain passports to get away.[33]What is here in italics is in manuscript in the original. There is noMonsieurnorMadame, the wordanglaisshowing the gender of the person to whom the pass was granted, and is sufficient for the purpose.[34]Poco más o menos,(a little more or less) as the Spaniards say when they are complimented withViva V. S. mil años(may you live a thousand years.)[35]The church ofSt. Louis du Louvreis at present made use of as a place of worship by protestants.All the church lands are reverted to the nation.In a speech which the AbbéMaurymade in the National Assembly, about two years ago, he estimated the value of the property belonging to ecclesiasticks in France at two thousand two hundred millions of livres,(Deux milliards deux cens millions) near ninety-two millions sterling, the interest or produce of which, at 3¼ per cent. per annum, amounts to the three millions beforementioned.France suffices to itself; it contains all the indigenous productions of Europe.The French hope, that the number of foreigners who will resort to their country, after it shall be more settled, will abundantly compensate the loss of the emigrants.[36]I was there in 1768, and again in 1783 and 1784, above four months. People of all nations are there seen in their proper habits; all languages are spoken; it is a free port, and the staple of the Levant trade, as well as of the West-Indian commerce.—There are regular vessels which sail monthly to Constantinople.[37]Thousandmust be read after all the following figures:Dunkerque80Besançon26La Rochelle16Rouen73Aix25Poitiers16Lille65Bourges25Auxerre16Nantes60Tours22Perpignan16Nismes50Arras22Chalons15Strasbourg46Limoges22Beauvais15Amiens44Abbeville20Riom15Metz40Verdun20Nevers14Caen40Arles20Boulogne12Orleans40Dijon20Bayonne12Rennes35Valenciennes20Soissons12Nancy34St. Malo18Angoulême11Montpellier32Beziers18Pau11Reims30Sedan18Alby10Clermont30Carcassonne18Alais10Troyes30Havre de Grace18Grasse10Grenoble30Moulins17Versailles10[38]By a decree in November, 1789, no curate is to have less salary than fiftyLouisper annum, not including his house and garden. Many of the French at present think that clergymen should be retained like physicians, and paid by those only who want them. By this means, they say, religious quarrels would be avoided; of all quarrels the most absurd, because nobody can understand any thing about the matter. "Personne n'y entend rien."[39]The civil list mentioned in page 62, was according to the old establishment. In January, 1790, the king was requested to fix a sum for the civil list himself, and in June following he sent a letter to the National Assembly, demanding five and twenty millions of livres. It was decreed that instant.[40]Salt, which was formerly sold at fourteensolsper pound, is now at a single sol. Tobacco is permitted to be cultivated by "whoever will."[41]I saw many thousands of these men (from my windows) on their way to theTuileries, early ontheFriday morning; their march was at the rate of perhaps five miles an hour, without running or looking aside; and this was the pace they used when they carried heads upon pikes, and when they were in pursuit of important business, rushing along the streets like a torrent, and attending wholly and solely to the object they had in view. On such occasions, when I saw them approaching, I turned into some cross street till they were passed, not that I had any thing to apprehend, but the being swept along with the crowd, and perhaps trampled upon. I cannot express what I felt on seeing such immense bodies of men so vigorously actuated by the same principle. I saw also many thousands of volunteers going to join the armies at the frontiers, marching along theBoulevarts, almost at the same pace, accompanied as far as the Barriers by their women, who were carrying their muskets for them; some with large sausages, pieces of cold meat, and loaves of bread, stuck on the bayonets, and all laughing, or singingça ira.The French writers themselves say, "In all popular commotions the women have always shown the greatest boldness."[42]The author of theVoyage de Francesays, "The actual division of France may appear to geographers as defective as the ancient one. Perhaps artists should have been more consulted. Then there would not have been shown in it so much of the spirit of party, which, in great assemblies, too often smothers the voice of reason, nor so many effects of the ignorance of political measurers, who lightly stride over barriers which nature has opposed to them, and who appear to have forgotten the necessity of communications."[43]The Gentleman who came with me, an English and an Irish Gentleman, with their Ladies, in their own chaises.There is an octavo Description ofChantillyjust published, with a map, and twentymezzotintoviews of the gardens.

[1]A post is about two leagues, or between four and six miles, as the posthouses are not exactly at the same distance from each other.

[1]A post is about two leagues, or between four and six miles, as the posthouses are not exactly at the same distance from each other.

[2]It is about five square miles, or rather, eight miles in length from two to four miles in breadth.

[2]It is about five square miles, or rather, eight miles in length from two to four miles in breadth.

[3]This was written after I had become familiarized to pikes.

[3]This was written after I had become familiarized to pikes.

[4]TheRotunda D'Orleans, in this wall, at the back of the gardens of theci-devantDuke of that name is worthy of observation.

[4]TheRotunda D'Orleans, in this wall, at the back of the gardens of theci-devantDuke of that name is worthy of observation.

[5]In 1788 the school was suppressed, the scholars were placed in the army, or in country colleges, and the building is intended, when the necessary alterations are completed, to be one of the four hospitals which are to replace that of theHôtel-Dieu. This hospital is in such a bad situation, being in the midst of Paris, that a quarter of the patients die. It contains only two thousand beds; each of the four new hospitals is to contain twelve hundred beds.

[5]In 1788 the school was suppressed, the scholars were placed in the army, or in country colleges, and the building is intended, when the necessary alterations are completed, to be one of the four hospitals which are to replace that of theHôtel-Dieu. This hospital is in such a bad situation, being in the midst of Paris, that a quarter of the patients die. It contains only two thousand beds; each of the four new hospitals is to contain twelve hundred beds.

[6]There is to be a new coinage without the king's profile, and it is to be hoped these wings, or rather the whole figure, will be left out.

[6]There is to be a new coinage without the king's profile, and it is to be hoped these wings, or rather the whole figure, will be left out.

[7]This article is, "The law has the right of prohibiting only those actions which are hurtful to society."

[7]This article is, "The law has the right of prohibiting only those actions which are hurtful to society."

[8]This and the formerechanger, &c. andremboursable, &c. appear to be superfluous.

[8]This and the formerechanger, &c. andremboursable, &c. appear to be superfluous.

[9]TheseBoulevartswere made in 1536, and planted with four rows of trees in 1668; these beautiful walks are too well known to be described here; they are 2400Toises(4800 yards, or almost three miles) long. The South Boulevarts are planted in the same manner, were finished in 1761, and are 3683Toises, or fathom (above four miles) in length.

[9]TheseBoulevartswere made in 1536, and planted with four rows of trees in 1668; these beautiful walks are too well known to be described here; they are 2400Toises(4800 yards, or almost three miles) long. The South Boulevarts are planted in the same manner, were finished in 1761, and are 3683Toises, or fathom (above four miles) in length.

[10]Mr. Pennant, in the second volume of his Tour in Scotland, has given a long account of such a machine, from which the following particulars are taken. "It was confined to the limits of the forest of Hardwick, or the eighteen towns and hamlets within its precincts. The execution was generally at Halifax; Twenty five criminals suffered during the reign of Queen Elizabeth; the records before that time were lost. Twelve more were executed between 1623 and 1650, after which it is supposed the privilege was no more exerted.——This machine is now destroyed, but there is one of the same kind, in a room under the Parliament house, at Edinburgh, where it was introduced by the Regent Morton, who took a model of it as he passed through Halifax, and at length suffered by it himself. It is in form of a painters easel, and about ten feet high: at four feet from the bottom is a cross-bar, on which the felon laid his head, which was kept down by another placed above. In the inner edges of the frame are grooves; in these is placed a sharp axe, with a vast weight of lead, supported at the summit by a peg; to that peg is fastened a cord, which the executioner cutting, the axe falls, and beheads the criminal. If he was condemned for stealing a horse or a cow, the string was tied to the beast, which pulled out the peg and became the executioner."

[10]Mr. Pennant, in the second volume of his Tour in Scotland, has given a long account of such a machine, from which the following particulars are taken. "It was confined to the limits of the forest of Hardwick, or the eighteen towns and hamlets within its precincts. The execution was generally at Halifax; Twenty five criminals suffered during the reign of Queen Elizabeth; the records before that time were lost. Twelve more were executed between 1623 and 1650, after which it is supposed the privilege was no more exerted.——This machine is now destroyed, but there is one of the same kind, in a room under the Parliament house, at Edinburgh, where it was introduced by the Regent Morton, who took a model of it as he passed through Halifax, and at length suffered by it himself. It is in form of a painters easel, and about ten feet high: at four feet from the bottom is a cross-bar, on which the felon laid his head, which was kept down by another placed above. In the inner edges of the frame are grooves; in these is placed a sharp axe, with a vast weight of lead, supported at the summit by a peg; to that peg is fastened a cord, which the executioner cutting, the axe falls, and beheads the criminal. If he was condemned for stealing a horse or a cow, the string was tied to the beast, which pulled out the peg and became the executioner."

[11]Mrs. Robinson tells me, that when she was at Paris, a few years ago, hervalet de place, came early one morning, informing her there would be agrand spectacle, and wanted to know if he should hire a place for her. This superb spectacle was no other than the execution of two murderers, who were to be broken alive on the wheel, in the Place de Grêve, on that day. She however says, that she declined going.

[11]Mrs. Robinson tells me, that when she was at Paris, a few years ago, hervalet de place, came early one morning, informing her there would be agrand spectacle, and wanted to know if he should hire a place for her. This superb spectacle was no other than the execution of two murderers, who were to be broken alive on the wheel, in the Place de Grêve, on that day. She however says, that she declined going.

[12]Genera plantarum, 798.

[12]Genera plantarum, 798.

[13]The seeds which are sold in the London shops, for those of this plant, are those of thehyssopus bracteatis.

[13]The seeds which are sold in the London shops, for those of this plant, are those of thehyssopus bracteatis.

[14]These trees are planted as close together as possible, hardly eight feet asunder, and no room is left for any walks, so that these gardens are, properly speaking, orange orchards. The oranges were then sold at the rate of ten for a penny English.

[14]These trees are planted as close together as possible, hardly eight feet asunder, and no room is left for any walks, so that these gardens are, properly speaking, orange orchards. The oranges were then sold at the rate of ten for a penny English.

[15]"In 1701 there were born in Hungary two Girls who were joined together by the loins; they lived above twenty-one years. At seven years old they were shown almost all over Europe; at nine years of age a priest purchased them, and placed them in a convent at Petersburg, where they remained till their death, which happened in 1723. An account of them was found among the papers of the surgeon who attended the convent, and was sent to the Royal Society of London in 1757. In this account we are told, that one of these twins was calledHelen, the otherJudith.Helengrew up and was very handy,Judithwas smaller and a little hump-backed. They were joined together by the reins, and in order to see each other they could turn their heads only. There was one commonanus, and of course there was only one common need of going to stool, but each had her separate urinary passage, and separate wants, which occasioned quarrels, because when the weakest was obliged to evacuate, the strongest, who sometimes would not stand still, pulled her away; they perfectly agreed in every thing else, and appeared to love each other. When they were seen in front, they did not differ apparently from other women. At six years oldJudithlost the use of her left side by a paralytick stroke; she never was perfectly cured, and her mind remained feeble and dull; on the contrary,Helenwas handsome, intelligent and even witty. They had the small-pox and the measles at the same time, but all their other sicknesses indispositions happened to each separately.Judithwas subject to a cough and a fever, whereasHelenwas generally in good health. When they had almost attained the age of twenty-twoJudithcaught a fever, fell into a lethargy and died. PoorHelenwas forced to follow her fate; three minutes before the death ofJudithshe fell into an agony, and died nearly at the same time. When they were dissected it was found, that each had her own entrails perfect, and even, that each had a separate excretory conduit, which however terminated at the sameanus."Linnæushas likewise described this monster. Many figures of double children of different kinds may be seen inLicetus de Monstris, 4to. 1665; and in theMedical Miscellanies, which were printed in Latin at Leipzig, in several quarto volumes, in 1673.

[15]"In 1701 there were born in Hungary two Girls who were joined together by the loins; they lived above twenty-one years. At seven years old they were shown almost all over Europe; at nine years of age a priest purchased them, and placed them in a convent at Petersburg, where they remained till their death, which happened in 1723. An account of them was found among the papers of the surgeon who attended the convent, and was sent to the Royal Society of London in 1757. In this account we are told, that one of these twins was calledHelen, the otherJudith.Helengrew up and was very handy,Judithwas smaller and a little hump-backed. They were joined together by the reins, and in order to see each other they could turn their heads only. There was one commonanus, and of course there was only one common need of going to stool, but each had her separate urinary passage, and separate wants, which occasioned quarrels, because when the weakest was obliged to evacuate, the strongest, who sometimes would not stand still, pulled her away; they perfectly agreed in every thing else, and appeared to love each other. When they were seen in front, they did not differ apparently from other women. At six years oldJudithlost the use of her left side by a paralytick stroke; she never was perfectly cured, and her mind remained feeble and dull; on the contrary,Helenwas handsome, intelligent and even witty. They had the small-pox and the measles at the same time, but all their other sicknesses indispositions happened to each separately.Judithwas subject to a cough and a fever, whereasHelenwas generally in good health. When they had almost attained the age of twenty-twoJudithcaught a fever, fell into a lethargy and died. PoorHelenwas forced to follow her fate; three minutes before the death ofJudithshe fell into an agony, and died nearly at the same time. When they were dissected it was found, that each had her own entrails perfect, and even, that each had a separate excretory conduit, which however terminated at the sameanus."Linnæushas likewise described this monster. Many figures of double children of different kinds may be seen inLicetus de Monstris, 4to. 1665; and in theMedical Miscellanies, which were printed in Latin at Leipzig, in several quarto volumes, in 1673.

[16]Rousseau used to play at chess here almost every day, which attracted such crowds of people to see him, that theLieutenant de Policewas obliged to place a sentinel at the door.

[16]Rousseau used to play at chess here almost every day, which attracted such crowds of people to see him, that theLieutenant de Policewas obliged to place a sentinel at the door.

[17]The same author has likewise published,Historical Singularitiesof Paris, in a single volume, and a Description of the Environs, in two volumes, 1790.

[17]The same author has likewise published,Historical Singularitiesof Paris, in a single volume, and a Description of the Environs, in two volumes, 1790.

[18]Almost £300,000 sterling, about a tenth part of the Church income of the whole kingdom. The establishment for the Royal Family, or Civil List, is said to have been forty millions of livres. Thus the Religion and the Monarch cost one hundred and ten millions of livres annually (about five millions sterling) the greater part of which sum is now appropriated to other uses. The convents are converted, or perverted, into secular useful buildings, and their inhabitants have been suffered to spend the remainder of their lives in their former idleness, or to marry and mix with society. Annuities have been granted to them from thirty-five to sixty louis per annum, according to their age.

[18]Almost £300,000 sterling, about a tenth part of the Church income of the whole kingdom. The establishment for the Royal Family, or Civil List, is said to have been forty millions of livres. Thus the Religion and the Monarch cost one hundred and ten millions of livres annually (about five millions sterling) the greater part of which sum is now appropriated to other uses. The convents are converted, or perverted, into secular useful buildings, and their inhabitants have been suffered to spend the remainder of their lives in their former idleness, or to marry and mix with society. Annuities have been granted to them from thirty-five to sixty louis per annum, according to their age.

[19]1020 feet by 72. Westminster-bridge is 1220 feet long, but only 44 feet wide.

[19]1020 feet by 72. Westminster-bridge is 1220 feet long, but only 44 feet wide.

[20]The inner diameter of the dome of St. Peter's, at Rome, 138 feet, which is the same size as that of the pantheon in Rome. St. Paul's in London 108. The Invalids in Paris 50.

[20]The inner diameter of the dome of St. Peter's, at Rome, 138 feet, which is the same size as that of the pantheon in Rome. St. Paul's in London 108. The Invalids in Paris 50.

[21]£750 sterling; I know not the present salary.

[21]£750 sterling; I know not the present salary.

[22]According to theJournal de la seconde legislature,seance de la nuitiiAoût.

[22]According to theJournal de la seconde legislature,seance de la nuitiiAoût.

[23]This is asserted on the authority of all the French newspapers, and of several eye-witnesses. It will never be possible to know the exact truth, for the people here said to be the aggressors are all slain.—These Swiss had trusted that they would have been backed by the National Guard, who, on the contrary, took the part of the people, and fired on the Swiss (who ran into the château as soon as they had discharged their pieces) by which several were killed.

[23]This is asserted on the authority of all the French newspapers, and of several eye-witnesses. It will never be possible to know the exact truth, for the people here said to be the aggressors are all slain.—These Swiss had trusted that they would have been backed by the National Guard, who, on the contrary, took the part of the people, and fired on the Swiss (who ran into the château as soon as they had discharged their pieces) by which several were killed.

[24]The balls did no other damage to the palace than breaking the windows, and leaving impressions in the stones, perhaps an inch in depth.

[24]The balls did no other damage to the palace than breaking the windows, and leaving impressions in the stones, perhaps an inch in depth.

[25]The whole of the foregoing account is taken from verbal information, and from all the French papers that could be procured.

[25]The whole of the foregoing account is taken from verbal information, and from all the French papers that could be procured.

[26]Although I was not an eye-witness, I was however an ear-witness of the engagement, being only half a mile distant from it.

[26]Although I was not an eye-witness, I was however an ear-witness of the engagement, being only half a mile distant from it.

[27]At the taking of the Bastille, on the day of which only eighty-three persons were killed on the spot, though fifteen died afterwards of their wounds, thesePoissardeswere likewise foremost in bravery and in cruelty, so much, that the Parisians themselves ran away from them as soon as they saw them at a distance. They are armed, some with sabres and others with pikes.

[27]At the taking of the Bastille, on the day of which only eighty-three persons were killed on the spot, though fifteen died afterwards of their wounds, thesePoissardeswere likewise foremost in bravery and in cruelty, so much, that the Parisians themselves ran away from them as soon as they saw them at a distance. They are armed, some with sabres and others with pikes.

[28]These are the words of a French newspaper, called,Journal universel, ou Revolutions des Royaumes, par J. P. Audarin. No. 994, for Sunday, 12 August, 4th year of Liberty, under the motto of Liberty, Patriotism and Truth.

[28]These are the words of a French newspaper, called,Journal universel, ou Revolutions des Royaumes, par J. P. Audarin. No. 994, for Sunday, 12 August, 4th year of Liberty, under the motto of Liberty, Patriotism and Truth.

[29]This is inserted on the authority of a lady, a native of the French West-India isles, who resided in the same hotel with me, and who, with two gentlemen who attended her, were witnesses to this transaction, which they told to whoever chose to listen.

[29]This is inserted on the authority of a lady, a native of the French West-India isles, who resided in the same hotel with me, and who, with two gentlemen who attended her, were witnesses to this transaction, which they told to whoever chose to listen.

[30]The king was shooting from theLouvre, and theFauxbourgSt.Germainis on the other side of the river.

[30]The king was shooting from theLouvre, and theFauxbourgSt.Germainis on the other side of the river.

[31]On the 28th of March, 1757,Damiens, who stabbedLewisXV. was executed in thePlace de Grêve, four horses were to pull his arms and legs from his body: they were fifty minutes pulling in vain, and at last his joints were obliged to be cut: he supported these torments patiently, and expired whilst the tendons of his shoulders were cutting, though he was living after his legs and thighs had been torn from his body; his right hand had previously been cut off. I was in Paris in 1768, and then, and at various times since have been assured by eye-witnesses, that almost all the windows of the square where the execution was performed were hired by ladies, at from two to tenlouiseach.Mr. Thicknesse in his "Year's journey through France and Part of Spain," in a letter datedDijon,in Burgundy, 1776, mentions a man whom he saw broke alive on the wheel by, "the executioner andhis mother, who assisted at this horrid business, these both seemed to enjoy the deadly office."I have formerly given an account of the Spanish ladies enjoying the barbarities of the bull-fights.

[31]On the 28th of March, 1757,Damiens, who stabbedLewisXV. was executed in thePlace de Grêve, four horses were to pull his arms and legs from his body: they were fifty minutes pulling in vain, and at last his joints were obliged to be cut: he supported these torments patiently, and expired whilst the tendons of his shoulders were cutting, though he was living after his legs and thighs had been torn from his body; his right hand had previously been cut off. I was in Paris in 1768, and then, and at various times since have been assured by eye-witnesses, that almost all the windows of the square where the execution was performed were hired by ladies, at from two to tenlouiseach.

Mr. Thicknesse in his "Year's journey through France and Part of Spain," in a letter datedDijon,in Burgundy, 1776, mentions a man whom he saw broke alive on the wheel by, "the executioner andhis mother, who assisted at this horrid business, these both seemed to enjoy the deadly office."

I have formerly given an account of the Spanish ladies enjoying the barbarities of the bull-fights.

[32]Before, and on the 10th of August, there were not above thirty British travellers in Paris, but after that day, in less than a week it was supposed that above two thousand had from all parts of the kingdom resorted to the capital, in order to obtain passports to get away.

[32]Before, and on the 10th of August, there were not above thirty British travellers in Paris, but after that day, in less than a week it was supposed that above two thousand had from all parts of the kingdom resorted to the capital, in order to obtain passports to get away.

[33]What is here in italics is in manuscript in the original. There is noMonsieurnorMadame, the wordanglaisshowing the gender of the person to whom the pass was granted, and is sufficient for the purpose.

[33]What is here in italics is in manuscript in the original. There is noMonsieurnorMadame, the wordanglaisshowing the gender of the person to whom the pass was granted, and is sufficient for the purpose.

[34]Poco más o menos,(a little more or less) as the Spaniards say when they are complimented withViva V. S. mil años(may you live a thousand years.)

[34]Poco más o menos,(a little more or less) as the Spaniards say when they are complimented withViva V. S. mil años(may you live a thousand years.)

[35]The church ofSt. Louis du Louvreis at present made use of as a place of worship by protestants.All the church lands are reverted to the nation.In a speech which the AbbéMaurymade in the National Assembly, about two years ago, he estimated the value of the property belonging to ecclesiasticks in France at two thousand two hundred millions of livres,(Deux milliards deux cens millions) near ninety-two millions sterling, the interest or produce of which, at 3¼ per cent. per annum, amounts to the three millions beforementioned.France suffices to itself; it contains all the indigenous productions of Europe.The French hope, that the number of foreigners who will resort to their country, after it shall be more settled, will abundantly compensate the loss of the emigrants.

[35]The church ofSt. Louis du Louvreis at present made use of as a place of worship by protestants.

All the church lands are reverted to the nation.

In a speech which the AbbéMaurymade in the National Assembly, about two years ago, he estimated the value of the property belonging to ecclesiasticks in France at two thousand two hundred millions of livres,(Deux milliards deux cens millions) near ninety-two millions sterling, the interest or produce of which, at 3¼ per cent. per annum, amounts to the three millions beforementioned.

France suffices to itself; it contains all the indigenous productions of Europe.

The French hope, that the number of foreigners who will resort to their country, after it shall be more settled, will abundantly compensate the loss of the emigrants.

[36]I was there in 1768, and again in 1783 and 1784, above four months. People of all nations are there seen in their proper habits; all languages are spoken; it is a free port, and the staple of the Levant trade, as well as of the West-Indian commerce.—There are regular vessels which sail monthly to Constantinople.

[36]I was there in 1768, and again in 1783 and 1784, above four months. People of all nations are there seen in their proper habits; all languages are spoken; it is a free port, and the staple of the Levant trade, as well as of the West-Indian commerce.—There are regular vessels which sail monthly to Constantinople.

[37]Thousandmust be read after all the following figures:Dunkerque80Besançon26La Rochelle16Rouen73Aix25Poitiers16Lille65Bourges25Auxerre16Nantes60Tours22Perpignan16Nismes50Arras22Chalons15Strasbourg46Limoges22Beauvais15Amiens44Abbeville20Riom15Metz40Verdun20Nevers14Caen40Arles20Boulogne12Orleans40Dijon20Bayonne12Rennes35Valenciennes20Soissons12Nancy34St. Malo18Angoulême11Montpellier32Beziers18Pau11Reims30Sedan18Alby10Clermont30Carcassonne18Alais10Troyes30Havre de Grace18Grasse10Grenoble30Moulins17Versailles10

[37]Thousandmust be read after all the following figures:

[38]By a decree in November, 1789, no curate is to have less salary than fiftyLouisper annum, not including his house and garden. Many of the French at present think that clergymen should be retained like physicians, and paid by those only who want them. By this means, they say, religious quarrels would be avoided; of all quarrels the most absurd, because nobody can understand any thing about the matter. "Personne n'y entend rien."

[38]By a decree in November, 1789, no curate is to have less salary than fiftyLouisper annum, not including his house and garden. Many of the French at present think that clergymen should be retained like physicians, and paid by those only who want them. By this means, they say, religious quarrels would be avoided; of all quarrels the most absurd, because nobody can understand any thing about the matter. "Personne n'y entend rien."

[39]The civil list mentioned in page 62, was according to the old establishment. In January, 1790, the king was requested to fix a sum for the civil list himself, and in June following he sent a letter to the National Assembly, demanding five and twenty millions of livres. It was decreed that instant.

[39]The civil list mentioned in page 62, was according to the old establishment. In January, 1790, the king was requested to fix a sum for the civil list himself, and in June following he sent a letter to the National Assembly, demanding five and twenty millions of livres. It was decreed that instant.

[40]Salt, which was formerly sold at fourteensolsper pound, is now at a single sol. Tobacco is permitted to be cultivated by "whoever will."

[40]Salt, which was formerly sold at fourteensolsper pound, is now at a single sol. Tobacco is permitted to be cultivated by "whoever will."

[41]I saw many thousands of these men (from my windows) on their way to theTuileries, early ontheFriday morning; their march was at the rate of perhaps five miles an hour, without running or looking aside; and this was the pace they used when they carried heads upon pikes, and when they were in pursuit of important business, rushing along the streets like a torrent, and attending wholly and solely to the object they had in view. On such occasions, when I saw them approaching, I turned into some cross street till they were passed, not that I had any thing to apprehend, but the being swept along with the crowd, and perhaps trampled upon. I cannot express what I felt on seeing such immense bodies of men so vigorously actuated by the same principle. I saw also many thousands of volunteers going to join the armies at the frontiers, marching along theBoulevarts, almost at the same pace, accompanied as far as the Barriers by their women, who were carrying their muskets for them; some with large sausages, pieces of cold meat, and loaves of bread, stuck on the bayonets, and all laughing, or singingça ira.The French writers themselves say, "In all popular commotions the women have always shown the greatest boldness."

[41]I saw many thousands of these men (from my windows) on their way to theTuileries, early ontheFriday morning; their march was at the rate of perhaps five miles an hour, without running or looking aside; and this was the pace they used when they carried heads upon pikes, and when they were in pursuit of important business, rushing along the streets like a torrent, and attending wholly and solely to the object they had in view. On such occasions, when I saw them approaching, I turned into some cross street till they were passed, not that I had any thing to apprehend, but the being swept along with the crowd, and perhaps trampled upon. I cannot express what I felt on seeing such immense bodies of men so vigorously actuated by the same principle. I saw also many thousands of volunteers going to join the armies at the frontiers, marching along theBoulevarts, almost at the same pace, accompanied as far as the Barriers by their women, who were carrying their muskets for them; some with large sausages, pieces of cold meat, and loaves of bread, stuck on the bayonets, and all laughing, or singingça ira.

The French writers themselves say, "In all popular commotions the women have always shown the greatest boldness."

[42]The author of theVoyage de Francesays, "The actual division of France may appear to geographers as defective as the ancient one. Perhaps artists should have been more consulted. Then there would not have been shown in it so much of the spirit of party, which, in great assemblies, too often smothers the voice of reason, nor so many effects of the ignorance of political measurers, who lightly stride over barriers which nature has opposed to them, and who appear to have forgotten the necessity of communications."

[42]The author of theVoyage de Francesays, "The actual division of France may appear to geographers as defective as the ancient one. Perhaps artists should have been more consulted. Then there would not have been shown in it so much of the spirit of party, which, in great assemblies, too often smothers the voice of reason, nor so many effects of the ignorance of political measurers, who lightly stride over barriers which nature has opposed to them, and who appear to have forgotten the necessity of communications."

[43]The Gentleman who came with me, an English and an Irish Gentleman, with their Ladies, in their own chaises.There is an octavo Description ofChantillyjust published, with a map, and twentymezzotintoviews of the gardens.

[43]The Gentleman who came with me, an English and an Irish Gentleman, with their Ladies, in their own chaises.

There is an octavo Description ofChantillyjust published, with a map, and twentymezzotintoviews of the gardens.


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