ABSTRACT

WE have been to fee the magnificent Palais de Bourbon. This immense pile of building, with its numerous and spacious courts, now deferred, solitary, and silent, affords ample room for moralizing. The petit Palais in which the Prince de Conde usually lived, and where he frequently entertained select parties of his friends, is fitted up with a degree of beauty, taste, and elegance, of which you can form no idea from any royal dwelling ÿou have seen in England.