Paris . de IHotel Dieu, because it was on landbelonging to the hospital) leads to the large mongrel Churchof La Trinite, whence the steep Rue de Clichy ascends tothe suburb of Batignolles. All this part of Paris is inde-scribably ugly and featureless. On the right, at the entrance of Rue Louis le Grand(No. 30), on the south of the boulevard, is the quaint andpicturesque Pavilion dHanovre, built by Chevotet for themarshal-duke, with money accumulated in the Hanoverianwar, and long regarded and looked upon as a model of suchsmall houses in the XVIII. c. See BrantSme and Les Chronigttes de rop4ra


Paris . de IHotel Dieu, because it was on landbelonging to the hospital) leads to the large mongrel Churchof La Trinite, whence the steep Rue de Clichy ascends tothe suburb of Batignolles. All this part of Paris is inde-scribably ugly and featureless. On the right, at the entrance of Rue Louis le Grand(No. 30), on the south of the boulevard, is the quaint andpicturesque Pavilion dHanovre, built by Chevotet for themarshal-duke, with money accumulated in the Hanoverianwar, and long regarded and looked upon as a model of suchsmall houses in the XVIII. c. See BrantSme and Les Chronigttes de rop4ra. I I 2 484 PARIS La r&ction de 1795 plaja au pavilion dHanovre le Bal desVictimes. Citaient des fetes auxquelles on nVtait admis quen prou-vant quon appartenait i une des innombrables families deciniees par laterreur, et, chose difficile k croire si on ne Iavait pas vue, la toilettedeg, femmes y rappelait quelque chose du sanglant appareil de I^, Regnier, and Champin, Paris FONTAINE GAILLON. No. 33 Rue Louis le Grand was built by the Mardchalde Richelieu in 1760. No. 9 has two fountains, broughtfrom the house of M. dEtoiles in the Rue du Sentier,and an admirable balustrade from the Hotel de Boulain-villiers, in the Rue Notre Dame des Victoires. The painter BOULEVARD DES ITALIENS 485 Rigaud lived and worked at the corner of the Rue Louis leGrand and the Rue Neuve des Petits Champs. The Rue de la Michodilre (called after a Prdvot desMarchands in 1777) leads to the Carrefour Gaillon, with anadmirable fountain erected (1828) from designs of Rue des Moulins, which opens just beyond on the left,contains the house (No. 14) of the well-known Abbd deIEp^e (Charles Michel de IEpde, 1712-89), the friend ofthe deaf and-dumb. The poet Piron lived and died in thisstreet. The Boulevard des Ifaliens, the gayest street in modernParis, leads eastwards. Sur le boulevard passant des Anglaises longues at angulausas, desHavanas jaunes, des Espagnols basanes,


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Keywords: ., bookcentury1800, bookdecade1880, bookidcu3192409881, bookyear1887