toulouse

Sir James Macdonald, [174]. Toulouse, [175]. Abbé Colbert, [175]. The Cuthberts of Castlehill, [176]. Archbishop Loménie de Brienne, [177]. Letter to Hume, [178]. Trip to Bordeaux, [179]. Colonel Barré, [179]. Toulouse and Bordeaux, [180]. Sobriety of Southern France, [180]. Duke of Richelieu, [181]. Letter to Hume, [181]; letter to Hume, [183]. Visit to Montpellier, [183]. Horne Tooke, [183]. The States of Languedoc, [183]. The provincial assembly question, [184]. Parliament of Toulouse, [185]. The Calas case, [186].

[CHAPTER XIII]

geneva

Its constitution, [188]. Voltaire, [189]; Smith's veneration for, [190]; remarks to Rogers and Saint Fond on, [190]. Charles Bonnet, G.L. Le Sage, [191]. Duchesse d'Enville and Duc de la Rochefoucauld, [192]. Lord Stanhope, Lady Conyers, [193].

[CHAPTER XIV]

paris

Arrival, [194]. Departure of Hume, [196]. Smith's reception in society, [197]. Comtesse de Boufflers, [198]. Baron d'Holbach, [199]. Helvetius, [200]. Morellet, [200]. Mademoiselle de l'Espinasse, [201]. Turgot and D'Alembert, [202]. Question of literary obligations, [203]. Alleged correspondence, [204]. Smith's opinion of Turgot, [205]. Necker, [206]. Dispute between Rousseau and Hume, [206]. Letter to Hume, [208]. Madame Riccoboni, [210]; letter from her to Garrick introducing Smith, [211]. Visit to Abbeville, [212]. A marquise, [213]. The French theatre, [214]. Smith's love of music, [214]. The French economists, [215]. Dupont de Nemours's allusion, [215]. Quesnay, [216]. Views of the political situation, [217]. Mercier de la Rivière and Mirabeau, [218]. Activity of the sect in 1766, [219]. Smith's views of effect of moderate taxation on wages, [220]. Illness of Duke of Buccleugh at Compiègne, [222]. Letter of Smith to Townshend, [222]. Hume's perplexity where to stay, [225]. Death of Hon. Hew Campbell Scott, [226]. Duke of Buccleugh on the tutorship, [226]. Smith's merits as tutor, [227]. His improvement from his travels, [227]; their value to him as thinker, [228]. Did he foresee the Revolution? [229]. His views on condition of French people, [230]. His suggestion for reform of French taxation, [231].

[CHAPTER XV]

london