INDEX
- Académie Française, [147];
- reception of M. Lavedan, [149];
- reception of M. Hervieu, [151];
- its restoration after the Terror, [154];
- its influence and mission, [155];
- prizes, [158]
- Affaire Dreyfus, [88], [93], [101], [126], [220], [237]
- Alsace and Lorraine, [102]
- Angoulême, [214]
- Anti-Semitism, [26], [53], [151]
- Aristocracy, [47];
- its disaffection, [50];
- the old-fashioned aristocrat, [55], [56];
- the modern rowdy aristocrat, [52], [56], [75], [259]
- Army, [87];
- its attitude, [90];
- its popularity, [91];
- the perils of militarism, [94];
- conscription, [94];
- a military document, [95];
- military service, [99];
- attitude of officers in civil courts, [101];
- M. Urbain Gohier’s indictment of the army, [103], [104];
- military plays, [105];
- French generals, [108];
- military rewards, [109];
- Au Tableau, [110]
- Artisan, [219], [244]
- Assistance Publique, [284];
- contrast of the state of the poor in Paris under the ancien régime and under the Third Republic, [284], [285], [288-292], [300]
- Aubernon, Madame, [257]
- Aversier, [17]
- Baccalauréat, [116]
- Balzac, [148], [205]
- Barrès, Maurice, [103], [156]
- Bazin, René, La Terra qui Meurt, [106], [205], [227]
- Béarn, [3]
- Blaguer, [255]
- Blaze de Bury, Madame, [178]
- Bodinière, [252]
- Bon Pasteur, [225]
- Bourgeoisie, the, [60];
- its provincial pretensions, [5];
- its prejudices, [63-65];
- its passion for titles, [66];
- the “little bourgeoise,” [264-274]
- Bourget, Paul, [51]
- Breton, [2];
- Breton superstitions, [19]
- Brisson, M., [256]
- Brunetière, M., [53], [152], [156], [159]
- Catholicism, the cult of St. Anthony of Padua, [18];
- hostility to the Republic, [89];
- its influence, [128]
- Charbonnel, Victor, [252]
- Châteaux, [9], [21], [22]
- Child service, [223]
- Clericalism, [27]
- Comédie Française, [161];
- its traditions, [161];
- its composition, [163];
- the new theatre, [164]
- Concierge, [277], [278]
- Conférence, la, [250]
- Conservatoire, [170-172]
- Convent life, [139-146]
- Country life, [5], [6], [25]
- Coppée, François, [103], [157], [236]
- Daudet, Alphonse, [172], [233]
- Demolins, M., [70], [113], [115], [117], [120]
- Duclaux, M., [241], [300], [304]
- Duruy, Georges, [104]
- École des Beaux Arts, [164]
- École Polytechnique, [104]
- Education, [112]
- England and France contrasted, [34], [37-42], [59], [65], [76], [118], [121], [167], [197], [206], [232]
- Environments of Paris, [82]
- Estaunié, M., L’Empreinte, [123], [127]
- Fabre, Ferdinand, [124]
- Fairs, [82]
- Farmer, [12]
- Fashionable Paris, [53]
- Faubourg St. Germain, [35], [50], [54], [55]
- Fiction, [118]
- Flats, [39]
- Flower markets, [43]
- Gallifet, General de, [108]
- Geoffrin, Madame, [256]
- Gouvernantes, [137]
- Grisette, [248], [274]
- Gyp, [50], [137], [259]
- Halévy, Ludovic and Daniel, [241]
- Halles, the, [43]
- Hirsch, Baroness de, [303]
- Hobereaux, [8-12]
- Home life, [55];
- its economies and courtesies, [179], [188];
- French table, [193], [194];
- home habits, [197]
- Hospitals, [285], [298], [300]
- Hugo, Victor, [263]
- Jacquou le Croquant, [124]
- Jeanne of Angoulême, [214], 520
- Jesuits, [123];
- their mission and training, [124-127]
- Jeunesse Royaliste, la, [46]
- Journal des Débats, [231], [234]
- Journal d’une Femme de Chambre, [213-215], [234]
- Larroumet, Gustave, [254]
- Lemaître, Jules, “Ligue de la Patrie Française,” [156], [157], [236]
- Le Vieux Marcheur, [148-150], [225]
- “Little bourgeoise,” the, [264-274]
- “Little people,” [226], [264], [273], [274], [281]
- Little Sisters of the Poor, [301], [302]
- Lycées, [113-122]
- Maison Darnetal, [292]
- Marais, the, [31]
- Marchand de Vin, [245]
- Maternité, the, [285-287]
- Métayer, [227]
- Minister: Waldeck-Rousseau, [230], [237], [240]
- Molière, [255], [262]
- Mont-de-Piété, [303]
- Montmartre, [32], [38], [85], [248]
- Morality, [38], [42];
- influences of public-school training, [117];
- the moral training of Stanislas College, [130-137];
- tolerance of vice, [176];
- feminine cynicism, [177];
- the Frenchman’s vices, [198]
- Motor cars, [60], [61]
- Napoleon, [46], [87], [110], [117], [154], [163], [234], [263]
- Nationalists, [75], [78], [79], [103], [220], [231], [236], [237]
- Nurses, religious and lay, [287], [293], [294]
- Orleans, Duc D’, [54], [91], [260]
- Paris and Parisianism, [28-57];
- the gaiety and charm of Paris, [29];
- the influence of women, [32];
- the old streets of the Faubourg St. Germain, [35];
- inoffensiveness of the streets, [38];
- rents, [39];
- walks, [41];
- markets, [43];
- Parisianism, [47];
- aristocratic Paris, [50];
- the old-fashioned noblewomen, [54], [55];
- Parisian washerwomen, [220-222]
- Pastimes, [80-86]
- Patriotism, [80], [103], [236]
- Peasant, the, [202], [215], [228]
- Pellouaille, La, [202-205]
- People’s colleges, [238-244]
- Philanthropy, [283], [298]
- Pinard, M., [285-288]
- Press, [229-235]
- Prix de Rome, [166], [167]
- Public ball, [246], [247]
- Rag-Picker, [278-280]
- Renan, [258], [263]
- Sainte-Beuve, [153], [155], [158]
- Sand, George, [205]
- “Servants of the poor,” [295-297]
- Stanislas College, [128-135]
- Taine, [179]
- Temps, Le, [231], [233], [234]
- Vogüé, M. De, Les Morts qui Parlent, [225]
- Woman’s rôle, [200], [201]
- Zola, M., [156], [205], [213]
THE END