Part 48 (1/2)

[Footnote 83: Elisa married Colonel T E H Pryce]

[Footnote 84: That is fro]

[Footnote 85: Sir Henry Stisted, who in 1845 married Burton's sister]

[Footnote 86: India, some 70 miles from Goa]

[Footnote 87: His brother]

[Footnote 88: The Ceylonese Rebellion of 1848]

[Footnote 89: See Chapter iii, 11]

[Footnote 90: See Arabian Nights, Terminal Essay D, and The Romance of Isabel Lady Burton, vol ii, p 730]

[Footnote 91: His Grandmother Baker had died in 1846]

[Footnote 92: The Pains of Sleep]

[Footnote 93: Byron: Childe Harold, iv 56]

[Footnote 94: Ariosto's Orlando was published in 1516; The Lusiads appeared in 1572]

[Footnote 95: Temple Bar, vol xcii, p 335]

[Footnote 96: As did that of the beauty in The Baital-Pachisi--Vikram and the Vampire Meml Ed, p 228]

[Footnote 97: Tale of Abu-el-Husn and his slave girl, Tawaddud--The Arabian Nights]

[Footnote 98: Life, i, 167]

[Footnote 99: She becarave]

[Footnote 100: See Burton's Stone Talk, 1865 Probably not ”Louise” at all, the na used to suit the rhyme]

[Footnote 101: Mrs Burton was always very severe on her own sex]

[Footnote 102: See Stone Talk]

[Footnote 103: See Chapter x]

[Footnote 104: The original, which belonged to Miss Stisted, is now in the possession of Mr Mostyn Pryce, of Gunley Hall]

[Footnote 105: Of course, since Arbuthnot's time scores of men have taken the burden on their shoulders, and translations of the Maha-Bharata, the Ramayana, and the works of Kalidasa, Hafiz, Sadi, and Jami, are now in the hands of everybody]

[Footnote 106: Preface to Persian Portraits]