Pav’d entry, London Wall.
Pavement row, Moorfields.
Paviours, a fellowship by prescription, and not by charter.
This company is governed by three Wardens and twenty-five Assistants; but though they have a coat of arms, they have neither hall nor livery.
Paviours alley, Drury lane.
Paviours court, Grub street, by Fore street, Moorgate.
Paulin’s street, Hanover street.†
Paulin’s wharf, Durham yard, in the Strand.
Paul’s alley, 1. Fenchurch street. 2. St Paul’s Church yard. 3. Redcross street. 4. Wood street, Cheapside.
St. Paul’s Cathedral, the most magnificent Protestant church in the world. This edifice has been generally supposed to have been founded in the place where anciently stood a temple dedicated by the Romans to the goddess Diana; an opinion derived from the tradition, of the heads of oxen, the horns of deer, and the tusks of boars having been commonly dug up there; but as Sir Christopher Wren in clearing the foundations of this ancient structure, found none of these, he justly discredited the opinion, and his son, in his Parentalia, has given a different account of the origin of the ancient edifice.