Part 52 (2/2)
[Footnote 303: Burton's A.N., Suppl., ii., 61. Lib. Ed. ix., p. 286, note.]
[Footnote 304: Thus, Balzac, tried to discover perpetual motion, proposed to grow pineapples which were to yield enormous profits, and to make opium the staple of Corsica, and he studied mathematical calculations in order to break the banks at Baden-Baden.]
[Footnote 305: We are telling the tale much as Mrs. Burton told it, but we warn the reader that it was one of Mrs. Burton's characteristics to be particularly hard on her own s.e.x and also that she was given to embroidering.]
[Footnote 306: Preface to Midian Revisited, x.x.xiv.]
[Footnote 307: Ex Ponto III., i., 19.]
[Footnote 308: The Gold Mines of Midian and the Ruined Midianite Cities (C.
Kegan Paul and Co.) It appeared in 1878.]
[Footnote 309: The Land of Midian Revisited, ii., 254.]
[Footnote 310: Kindly copied for me by Miss Gordon, his daughter.]
[Footnote 311: They left on July 6th (1878) and touched at Venice, Brindisi, Palermo and Gibraltar.]
[Footnote 312: November 1876.]
[Footnote 313: From the then unpublished Kasidah.]
[Footnote 314: The famous Yogis. Their blood is dried up by the scorching sun of India, they pa.s.s their time in mediation, prayer and religious abstinence, until their body is wasted, and they fancy themselves favoured with divine revelations.]
[Footnote 315: The Spiritualist. 13th December 1878.]
[Footnote 316: In short, she had considerable natural gifts, which were never properly cultivated.]
[Footnote 317: See Chapter x.x.xviii.]
[Footnote 318: Arabia, Egypt, India.]
[Footnote 319: Letter to Miss Stisted.]
[Footnote 320: She says, I left my Indian Christmas Book with Mr. Bogue on 7th July 1882, and never saw it after.]
[Footnote 321: Burton dedicated to Yacoub Pasha Vol. x. of his Arabian Nights.
They had then been friends for 12 years.]
[Footnote 322: Inferno, xix.]
[Footnote 323: Canto x., stanza 153.]
[Footnote 324: Canto x., stanzas 108-118.]
[Footnote 325: Between the Indus and the Ganges.]
<script>