Parisot was owned by Sir Frank Standish, who won the 1796 Epsom Derby with his colt Didelot.
Her dam, Deceit (foaled in 1784), was bred by Mr Tattersall and was owned by Sir Frank Standish.
Parisot's full-sister, the Sir Peter Mare (foaled in 1802), was the dam of Gramarie and the maternal grandam of Derby winner Prince Leopold.
[8] At the October meeting at Newmarket, Parisot was third in the Town Plate, losing to the colts Stickler and Hyperion.
[11] Parisot started in the Craven Stakes held on 17 April at Newmarket but was unplaced in the race won by Hambletonian.
[15] In April at the Craven meeting, Parisot was fourth in the second class of the Oatlands Stakes,[16] was third in the King's Plate won by Mr Phillips's filly Lilly[17] and withdrew from a 600-guinea sweepstakes race.
[32][33] Commentary in the Sporting Magazine stated that poison was "administered in their watering troughs" in an attempt to prevent the animals from running in the Stakes.