. The journal of a British chaplain in Paris during the peace negotiations of 1801-2 from the unpublished ms. of the Revd. Dawson Warren, M. A., unofficially attached to the diplomatic mission of Mr. Francis James Jackson. leaves us his. I walkedwith Francis and Hill to look at one, but it suitednot. Hill and I left him and took a long streets of Paris are narrow and dirty. Havingno pavement for the accomodation of footpassengers they are miserably inconvenient forwalking. We went through the gardens of theTuileries and crossed them in various are magnificent but all l


. The journal of a British chaplain in Paris during the peace negotiations of 1801-2 from the unpublished ms. of the Revd. Dawson Warren, M. A., unofficially attached to the diplomatic mission of Mr. Francis James Jackson. leaves us his. I walkedwith Francis and Hill to look at one, but it suitednot. Hill and I left him and took a long streets of Paris are narrow and dirty. Havingno pavement for the accomodation of footpassengers they are miserably inconvenient forwalking. We went through the gardens of theTuileries and crossed them in various are magnificent but all laid out in straightwalks and angles. In one corner is a statue ofVoltaire miserably executed, enclosed by a highopen paling, the area within which is a flowergarden. A paper on a board within this palingpresents to the lounging spectator a long eulogyon the Philosopher of Ferney, and calls on everyone both in prose and verse to do homage to hisname. The British Diplomatists meet at Dinner Francis dined at Decres, and came home verywell pleased with his visit. He had met all theMinisters of State, and several of the greatGenerals of the Republic. Moreau, whom he calleda most gentlemanly man ; Berthier, pretty well;.


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Keywords: ., bookcentury1900, bookdecade1910, bookidjournalofbri, bookyear1913