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  • Oct. 22, 1864
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  • IMPERIAL PARIS.
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The Freemasons' Monthly Magazine, Oct. 22, 1864: Page 2

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Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.

Imperial Paris.

"Years ago , when the North London Railway was commenced , it was fully determined that some system of encircling the metropolis by the iron road should be carried out . This is not done yet ; but here , at Paris , they haA - e literally put a complete girdle round the city , in the shape of the ceinture railway , some twenty miles

in length , which is nearly complete . The stagnant waters of the old Canal de l'Ouroq , and the clumsy barges Avhich were scarcely tolerable in so large a city—how were these evils to be got rid of , and the useful canal spared ? A bold and simple method was adopted , and the whole arched over like a tunnel ; and the visitor AA'ho drives

down the splendid new Boulevard Prince Eugene ( Beauharnais , of course—not Marlborough ' s friend ) little thinks that huge cargoes of stone and floats of timber are gliding under his feet , while trees are groAving over the heads of the sturdy blue-clad bargemen .

" Now , it will be asked , how does the land let for building ? You may provide a feast , and none may come to feast ; you may make streets , and none come to build . Such is not the case in Paris . Houses are springing up in e \ ery direction , as if by enchantment . The majority of the dwellings are generally considered to be

constructed on too expensive a scale ; that is to say , there are many thousands of the modern houses for Avhich an apartment on the first floor will cost the tenant from 3 , 000 fr . tol 0 , 000 fr ., or even 15 , 000 fr ., per annum , exclusive of taxes ( from £ 120 to £ 600 a year ) , and these suites of apartments are not in the most fashionable

localities of Paris . The general impression is that there are too many expensive large apartments , and too few to accommodate a class of tenants Avhose incomes may range from £ 300 to £ 800 a year . "I observed on going down tho Boulevard Malesherbos and other important streets of modern Paris , that

many first and second floors are to let , and I hear from practical people that they are not likely to be occupied unless they are to be subdivided so as to meet the purses of the majority of tenants .

"In my last letter I described the general renaissance character of the white stone buildings of Paris . This does not appear to have been materially departed from during the last two years . Perhaps there may be a little more ornament , but this is not the wild , spasmodic sensational stuff Ave get in London , but , if possible , is

more delicate and refined than before . The entrancedoors , in particular , are perfect models of design . From the architectural dressings down to the elegant handles by Avhich they are closed , all is subject of thought and taste . As a proof that building iu Paris , as regards apartments of moderate size , is not overdone , the rents

of smaller suites of rooms have actually increased in value of late . Taxes , however , are nominally lighter , for the landowner generally paj's the city lighting and paving dues ; but a curious impost—a mixture of the real and personal—a sort of income-tax—is levied on the tenant , called the mobilier or furniture tax , which is a

sort of por-centage ou the rent . One tax , however , which Avould be most hateful to the Londoner , really falls heavily on the tenant—the octroi on all sorts of food . The Londoner grumbles at the City dues ou coals ;

what would he say to such a municipal duty on bis butter , his bacon , his eggs , his everything he eats or drinks P However , so it is here . "To return ; the principal streets UOAV in progress are the Avenue de Yincennes , leading from the Place de la Bastille ; the Boulevard St . G-ormain , from that of

Sebastopol to the Halles aux Yins ; the Rue Feuillantain , by the Pantheon ; the Rue Turbige , from the Halles Oentrale to the Faubourg du Temple ; the new streets round the Grand Opera ; the continuation of the Boulevard Magenta ; the Avenue de l'Alma , leading from the Ohamps-Elysces across the river to the Champ de

Mars ; and the new Avenue du Roi de Rome . " The projected lines are a fine system between the Observatoire and the Salpetriere , branching from a point near the Gobelins ; the new Boulevards des Amandiers , leading from that of St . Martin to the cemetery of Pero la Chaise ; the continuation of the Rue La Fayette

to tho Grand Opera ; a boulevard running northward from the Etoile des Champs Elysees to the Pare Monceaux ; the continuation of the Avenue do 1 'Emporeur to the Pont de l'Alma , and a fine street from the Rue de Rennes to the Quai Oonti .

"These new streets are most judiciously planned . They are all intended to radiate from , and terminate in ,, great central points . The system is the very reverse of that of the Quaker cities in America , Avhere one must go round two sides of a square ( pardon the apparent blander , but no other phrase can express it ) to got to

the opposite corner . This system of plan has here the additional merit of affording the opportunity of laying out the centres as grandes places , etoiles , sites for columns , statues , gardens , fountains , and for a better class of houses than the main streets themselves . "No difficulties are allowed to stand in the way of

this system of direct lines . The hills about Passy , and the Batignolles , Avhere a short time ago the Parisian cockneys used to ramble and talk of pastoral life , are fairly levelled if they stand in the way . At present , on the line of tho Avenue du Roi de Rome , the road is in a cutting where the bank stands up some twenty feet above the footpath . No matter , the earth will be wanted

to fill up elsewhere , and will soon disappear as if by the wand of the magician . "Years ago Lincohi ' s-inn and Leicester-square were in 'the fields . ' Pancras was a country walk ; Highgate and Hampstead almost a journey . At the time when its author wrote the ' Yoyage de Paris a St . Cloud , ' he

made his hero hurst into vivid apostrophes when ' setting sail' in 'the briny ocean' —that is , getting into the little steamer at the Pont de la Concorde , Avhere the river is about half "the width that ours is at Battersea . ' Beloved Passy , ' says the still most loved Issy , ' adorable Yaugirard , in whose pastoral groves these feet have

strayed iu innocence—farewell ! Should I escape the treacherous ocean , and the anger of the tempest , Avith what feelings shall I revisit thee ! ' The brick and mortar king , or rather stone or mortar , has run o \ er all the neighbourhood , and there is no more pastorality there than there is in Belgrave-square or in Goodman's-fields . " As to the national building , the Grand Opera is gra >

“The Freemasons' Monthly Magazine: 1864-10-22, Page 2” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 7 June 2025, django:8000/periodicals/mmr/issues/mmr_22101864/page/2/.
  • List
  • Grid
Title Category Page
THE LATE DUKE OF NEWCASTLE. Article 1
IMPERIAL PARIS. Article 1
Untitled Article 3
MASONIC NOTES AND QUERIES. Article 3
CORRESPONDENCE. Article 6
ROYAL ARCH. Article 7
THE MASONIC MIRROR. Article 7
BOYS' SCHOOL. Article 7
METROPOLITAN. Article 7
PROVINCIAL. Article 8
ANCIENT AND ACCEPTED RITE. Article 11
INDIA. Article 11
Obituary. Article 13
BRO. JOHN HOLLINS, P.M. AND TREAS. 169, W.M. 147. Article 15
PUBLIC AMUSEMENTS. Article 15
THE WEEK. Article 17
TO CORRESPONDENTS. Article 20
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Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.

Imperial Paris.

"Years ago , when the North London Railway was commenced , it was fully determined that some system of encircling the metropolis by the iron road should be carried out . This is not done yet ; but here , at Paris , they haA - e literally put a complete girdle round the city , in the shape of the ceinture railway , some twenty miles

in length , which is nearly complete . The stagnant waters of the old Canal de l'Ouroq , and the clumsy barges Avhich were scarcely tolerable in so large a city—how were these evils to be got rid of , and the useful canal spared ? A bold and simple method was adopted , and the whole arched over like a tunnel ; and the visitor AA'ho drives

down the splendid new Boulevard Prince Eugene ( Beauharnais , of course—not Marlborough ' s friend ) little thinks that huge cargoes of stone and floats of timber are gliding under his feet , while trees are groAving over the heads of the sturdy blue-clad bargemen .

" Now , it will be asked , how does the land let for building ? You may provide a feast , and none may come to feast ; you may make streets , and none come to build . Such is not the case in Paris . Houses are springing up in e \ ery direction , as if by enchantment . The majority of the dwellings are generally considered to be

constructed on too expensive a scale ; that is to say , there are many thousands of the modern houses for Avhich an apartment on the first floor will cost the tenant from 3 , 000 fr . tol 0 , 000 fr ., or even 15 , 000 fr ., per annum , exclusive of taxes ( from £ 120 to £ 600 a year ) , and these suites of apartments are not in the most fashionable

localities of Paris . The general impression is that there are too many expensive large apartments , and too few to accommodate a class of tenants Avhose incomes may range from £ 300 to £ 800 a year . "I observed on going down tho Boulevard Malesherbos and other important streets of modern Paris , that

many first and second floors are to let , and I hear from practical people that they are not likely to be occupied unless they are to be subdivided so as to meet the purses of the majority of tenants .

"In my last letter I described the general renaissance character of the white stone buildings of Paris . This does not appear to have been materially departed from during the last two years . Perhaps there may be a little more ornament , but this is not the wild , spasmodic sensational stuff Ave get in London , but , if possible , is

more delicate and refined than before . The entrancedoors , in particular , are perfect models of design . From the architectural dressings down to the elegant handles by Avhich they are closed , all is subject of thought and taste . As a proof that building iu Paris , as regards apartments of moderate size , is not overdone , the rents

of smaller suites of rooms have actually increased in value of late . Taxes , however , are nominally lighter , for the landowner generally paj's the city lighting and paving dues ; but a curious impost—a mixture of the real and personal—a sort of income-tax—is levied on the tenant , called the mobilier or furniture tax , which is a

sort of por-centage ou the rent . One tax , however , which Avould be most hateful to the Londoner , really falls heavily on the tenant—the octroi on all sorts of food . The Londoner grumbles at the City dues ou coals ;

what would he say to such a municipal duty on bis butter , his bacon , his eggs , his everything he eats or drinks P However , so it is here . "To return ; the principal streets UOAV in progress are the Avenue de Yincennes , leading from the Place de la Bastille ; the Boulevard St . G-ormain , from that of

Sebastopol to the Halles aux Yins ; the Rue Feuillantain , by the Pantheon ; the Rue Turbige , from the Halles Oentrale to the Faubourg du Temple ; the new streets round the Grand Opera ; the continuation of the Boulevard Magenta ; the Avenue de l'Alma , leading from the Ohamps-Elysces across the river to the Champ de

Mars ; and the new Avenue du Roi de Rome . " The projected lines are a fine system between the Observatoire and the Salpetriere , branching from a point near the Gobelins ; the new Boulevards des Amandiers , leading from that of St . Martin to the cemetery of Pero la Chaise ; the continuation of the Rue La Fayette

to tho Grand Opera ; a boulevard running northward from the Etoile des Champs Elysees to the Pare Monceaux ; the continuation of the Avenue do 1 'Emporeur to the Pont de l'Alma , and a fine street from the Rue de Rennes to the Quai Oonti .

"These new streets are most judiciously planned . They are all intended to radiate from , and terminate in ,, great central points . The system is the very reverse of that of the Quaker cities in America , Avhere one must go round two sides of a square ( pardon the apparent blander , but no other phrase can express it ) to got to

the opposite corner . This system of plan has here the additional merit of affording the opportunity of laying out the centres as grandes places , etoiles , sites for columns , statues , gardens , fountains , and for a better class of houses than the main streets themselves . "No difficulties are allowed to stand in the way of

this system of direct lines . The hills about Passy , and the Batignolles , Avhere a short time ago the Parisian cockneys used to ramble and talk of pastoral life , are fairly levelled if they stand in the way . At present , on the line of tho Avenue du Roi de Rome , the road is in a cutting where the bank stands up some twenty feet above the footpath . No matter , the earth will be wanted

to fill up elsewhere , and will soon disappear as if by the wand of the magician . "Years ago Lincohi ' s-inn and Leicester-square were in 'the fields . ' Pancras was a country walk ; Highgate and Hampstead almost a journey . At the time when its author wrote the ' Yoyage de Paris a St . Cloud , ' he

made his hero hurst into vivid apostrophes when ' setting sail' in 'the briny ocean' —that is , getting into the little steamer at the Pont de la Concorde , Avhere the river is about half "the width that ours is at Battersea . ' Beloved Passy , ' says the still most loved Issy , ' adorable Yaugirard , in whose pastoral groves these feet have

strayed iu innocence—farewell ! Should I escape the treacherous ocean , and the anger of the tempest , Avith what feelings shall I revisit thee ! ' The brick and mortar king , or rather stone or mortar , has run o \ er all the neighbourhood , and there is no more pastorality there than there is in Belgrave-square or in Goodman's-fields . " As to the national building , the Grand Opera is gra >

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