173 (return)
[ The ruler, like the
country, is called Kazembe.]
174 (return)
[ Dr. Lacerda died at
Lunda 18th October 1798. Burton's translation, The Lands of the Cazembe,
etc., appeared in 1873.]
175 (return)
[ The Beharistan. 1st
Garden.]
176 (return)
[ J. A. Grant, born 1827,
died 10th February, 1892.]
177 (return)
[ The Romance of Isabel
Lady Burton, i., 149.]
178 (return)
[ He is, of course,
simply endorsing the statement of Hippocrates: De Genitura: "Women, if
married, are more healthy, if not, less so."
179 (return)
[ The anecdotes in this
chapter were told me by one of Burton's friends. They are not in his
books.]
180 (return)
[ This letter was given
by Mrs. FitzGerald (Lady Burton's sister) to Mr. Foskett of Camberwell. It
is now in the library there, and I have to thank the library committee for
the use of it.]
181 (return)
[ Life, i., 345.]
182 (return)
[ 1861.]
183 (return)
[ Vambery's work, The
Story of my Struggles, appeared in October 1904.]
184 (return)
[ The first edition
appeared in 1859. Burton's works contain scores of allusions to it. To the
Gold Coast, ii., 164. Arabian Nights (many places), etc., etc.]
185 (return)
[ Life of Lord Houghton,
ii., 300.]
186 (return)
[ Lord Russell was
Foreign Secretary from 1859-1865.]
187 (return)
[ Wanderings in West
Africa, 2 vols., 1863.]
188 (return)
[ The genuine black, not
the mulatto, as he is careful to point out. Elsewhere he says the negro is
always eight years old—his mind never develops. Mission to Gelele,
i, 216.]
189 (return)
[ Wanderings in West
Africa, vol. ii., p. 283.]
190 (return)
[ See Mission to Gelele,
ii., 126.]
191 (return)
[ Although the anecdote
appears in his Abeokuta it seems to belong to this visit.]
192 (return)
[ Mrs. Maclean, "L.E.L.,"
went out with her husband, who was Governor of Cape Coast Castle. She was
found poisoned 15th October 1838, two days after her arrival. Her last
letters are given in The Gentleman's Magazine, February 1839.]
193 (return)
[ See Chapter xxii.]
194 (return)
[ Lander died at Fernando
Po, 16th February 1834.]
195 (return)
[ For notes on Fernando
Po see Laird and Oldfield's Narrative of an Expedition into the Interior
of Africa, etc. (1837), Winwood Reade's Savage Africa, and Rev. Henry
Roe's West African Scenes (1874).]
196 (return)
[ Told me by the Rev.
Henry Roe.]
197 (return)
[ Life, and various other
works.]
198 (return)
[ See Abeokuta and the
Cameroons, 2 vols., 1863.]
199 (return)
[ Two Trips to Gorilla
Land and the Cataracts of the Congo, 2 vols., 1876.]
200 (return)
[ "Who first bewitched
our eyes with Guinea gold." Dryden, Annus Mirabilis, 67.]
201 (return)
[ Incorporated
subsequently with a Quarterly Journal, The Anthropological Review.]
202 (return)
[ See Chapter xxix.,
140.]
203 (return)
[ Foreword to The Arabian
Nights, vol. 1. The Arabian Nights, of course, was made to answer the
purpose of this organ.]
204 (return)
[ See Wanderings in West
Africa, vol. 2, p. 91. footnote.]
205 (return)
[ Burton.]
206 (return)
[ Afa is the messenger of
fetishes and of deceased friends. Thus by the Afa diviner people
communicate with the dead.]
207 (return)
[ This was Dr.
Lancaster's computation.]
208 (return)
[ Communicated to me by
Mr. W. H. George, son of Staff-Commander C. George, Royal Navy.]
209 (return)
[ Rev. Edward Burton,
Burton's grandfather, was Rector of Tuam. Bishop Burton, of Killala, was
the Rev. Edward Burton's brother.]
210 (return)
[ The copy is in the
Public Library, High Street, Kensington, where most of Burton's books are
preserved.]
211 (return)
[ Spanish for "little
one."
212 (return)
[ The Lusiads, 2 vols.,
1878. Says Aubertin, "In this city (Sao Paulo) and in the same room in
which I began to read The Lusiads in 1860, the last stanza of the last
canto was finished on the night of 24th February 1877."
213 (return)
[ Burton dedicated the
1st vol. of his Arabian Nights to Steinhauser.]
214 (return)
[ Dom Pedro, deposed 15th
November 1889.]
215 (return)
[ This anecdote differs
considerably from Mrs. Burton's version, Life, i., 438. I give it,
however, as told by Burton to his friends.]
216 (return)
[ Lusiads, canto 6,
stanza 95. Burton subsequently altered and spoilt it. The stanza as given
will be found on the opening page of the Brazil book.]
217 (return)
[ He describes his
experiences in his work The Battlefields of Paraguay.]
218 (return)
[ Unpublished. Told me by
Mrs. E. J. Burton. Manning was made a cardinal in 1875.]
219 (return)
[ Mr. John Payne,
however, proves to us that the old Rashi'd, though a lover of the arts,
was also a sensual and bloodthirsty tyrant. See Terminal Essay to his
Arabian Nights, vol. ix.]
220 (return)
[ She thus signed herself
after her very last marriage.]
221 (return)
[ Mrs. Burton's words.]
222 (return)
[ Life i., p. 486.]
223 (return)
[ Arabian Nights. Lib.
Ed, i., 215.]
224 (return)
[ Burton generally writes
Bedawi and Bedawin. Bedawin (Bedouin) is the plural form of Bedawi.
Pilgrimage to Meccah, vol. ii., p. 80.]
225 (return)
[ 1870. Three months
after Mrs. Burton's arrival.]
226 (return)
[ It contained, among
other treasures, a Greek manuscript of the Bible with the Epistle of
Barnabas and a portion of the Shepherd of Hermas.]
227 (return)
[ 1 Kings, xix., 15; 2
Kings, viii., 15.]
228 (return)
[ The Romance of Isabel
Lady Burton, ii., 386.]
229 (return)
[ 11th July 1870.]
230 (return)
[ E. H. Palmer
(1840-1882). In 1871 he was appointed Lord Almoner's Professor of Arabic
at Cambridge. He was murdered at Wady Sudr, 11th August 1882. See Chapter
xxiii.]
231 (return)
[ Renan. See, too,
Paradise Lost, Bk. 1. Isaiah (xvii., 10) alludes to the portable "Adonis
Gardens" which the women used to carry to the bier of the god.]
232 (return)
[ The Hamath of
Scripture. 2. Sam., viii., 9; Amos, vi., 2.]
233 (return)
[ See illustrations in
Unexplored Syria, by Burton and Drake.]
234 (return)
[ The Land of Midian
Revisited, ii., 73.]
235 (return)
[ Life of Edward H.
Palmer, p. 109.]
236 (return)
[ Chica is the feminine
of Chico (Spanish).]
237 (return)
[ Mrs. Burton's
expression.]
238 (return)
[ District east of the
Sea of Galilee.]
239 (return)
[ Job, chapter xxx. "But
now they that are younger than I have me in derision... who cut up mallows
by the bushes and juniper roots for their meat."
240 (return)
[ Greek Geographer. 250
B.C.]
241 (return)
[ Burton's words.]
242 (return)
[ Published in 1898.]
243 (return)
[ Life, i., 572.]
244 (return)
[ The Romance of Isabel
Lady Burton, ii., 504.]
245 (return)
[ The Romance of Isabel
Lady Burton, ii., 505.]
246 (return)
[ Temple Bar, vol. xcii.,
p. 339.]
247 (return)
[ Near St. Helens,
Lancs.]
248 (return)
[ Life of Sir Richard
Burton, by Lady Burton, i., 591.]
249 (return)
[ 2nd November 1871.]
250 (return)
[ The fountain was
sculptured by Miss Hosmer.]
251 (return)
[ 27th February 1871.
Celebration of the Prince of Wales's recovery from a six weeks' attack of
typhoid fever.]
252 (return)
[ Her husband's case.]
253 (return)
[ Of course, this was an
unnecessary question, for there was no mistaking the great scar on
Burton's cheek; and Burton's name was a household word.]
254 (return)
[ February 1854. Sir
Roger had sailed from Valparaiso to Rio Janeiro. He left Rio in the
"Bella," which was lost at sea.]
255 (return)
[ Undated.]
256 (return)
[ Knowsley is close to
Garswood, Lord Gerard's seat.]
257 (return)
[ Letter, 4th January
1872.]
258 (return)
[ Garswood,
Newton-le-Willows, Lancashire.]
259 (return)
[ Unpublished letter.]
260 (return)
[ The True Life, p. 336.]
261 (return)
[ It had just been
vacated by the death of Charles Lever, the novelist. Lever had been Consul
at Trieste from 1867 to 1872. He died at Trieste, 1st June 1872.]
262 (return)
[ Near Salisbury.]
263 (return)
[ Burton's A.N. iv. Lib.
Ed., iii., 282. Payne's A.N. iii., 10.]
264 (return)
[ Told me by Mr. Henry
Richard Tedder, librarian at the Athenaeum from 1874.]
265 (return)
[ Burton, who was himself
always having disputes with cab-drivers and everybody else, probably
sympathised with Mrs. Prodgers' crusade.]
266 (return)
[ Of 2nd November 1891.]
267 (return)
[ Lake Regions of
Equatorial Africa (2 vols. 1860). Vol. 33 of the Royal Geographical
Society, 1860, and The Nile Basin, 1864.]
268 (return)
[ A portion was written
by Mrs. Burton.]
269 (return)
[ These are words used by
children. Unexplored Syria, i., 288. Nah really means sweetstuff.]
270 (return)
[ Afterwards
Major-General. He died in April 1887. See Chapter ix., 38.]
271 (return)
[ Mrs. Burton and Khamoor
followed on Nov. 18th.]
272 (return)
[ Burton's works contain
many citations from Ovid. Thus there are two in Etruscan Bologna, pp. 55
and 69, one being from the Ars Amandi and the other from The Fasti.]
273 (return)
[ Stendhal, born 1783.
Consul at Trieste and Civita Vecchia from 1830 to 1839. Died in Paris,
23rd March 1842. Burton refers to him in a footnote to his Terminal Essay
in the Nights on "Al Islam."
274 (return)
[ These are all preserved
now at the Central Library, Camberwell.]
275 (return)
[ Now in the possession
of Mrs. St. George Burton.]
276 (return)
[ In later times Dr.
Baker never saw more than three tables.]
277 (return)
[ Mrs. Burton, was, of
course, no worse than many other society women of her day. Her books
bristle with slang.]
278 (return)
[ It is now in the
possession of Mrs. E. J. Burton, 31, Whilbury Road, Brighton.]
279 (return)
[ Later Burton was
himself a sad sinner in this respect. His studies made him forget his
meals.]
280 (return)
[ His usual pronunciation
of the word.]
281 (return)
[ 12th August 1874.]
282 (return)
[ Letter to Lord
Houghton.]
283 (return)
[ Dr. Grenfell Baker,
afterwards Burton's medical attendant.]
284 (return)
[ Hell.]
285 (return)
[ A.E.I. (Arabia, Egypt,
Indian).]
286 (return)
[ Burton's A. N., v.,
304. Lib. Ed., vol. 4., p. 251.]
287 (return)
[ About driving four
horses.]
288 (return)
[ I do not know to what
this alludes.]
289 (return)
[ See Chapter i.]
290 (return)
[ Its population is now
80,000.]
291 (return)
[ Sind Revisited, i.,
82.]
292 (return)
[ See Sind Revisited,
vol. ii., pp. 109 to 149.]
293 (return)
[ Where Napier with 2,800
men defeated 22,000.]
294 (return)
[ Romance of Isabel Lady
Burton, ii., 584.]
295 (return)
[ Dr. Da Cunha, who was
educated at Panjim, spent several years in England, and qualified at the
Colleges of Physicians and Surgeons. He built up a large practice in Goa.]
296 (return)
[ There are many English
translations, from Harrington's, 1607, to Hoole's, 1783, and Rose's, 1823.
The last is the best.]
297 (return)
[ Sir Henry Stisted died
of consumption in 1876.]
298 (return)
[ Robert Bagshaw, he
married Burton's aunt, Georgiana Baker.]
299 (return)
[ His cousin Sarah, who
married Col. T. Pryce Harrison. See Chapter iv. and Chapter xix.]
300 (return)
[ Burton's brother.]
301 (return)
[ Romance of Isabel Lady
Burton, ii., 656.]
302 (return)
[ Romance of Isabel Lady
Burton.]
303 (return)
[ Burton's A.N., Suppl.,
ii., 61. Lib. Ed. ix., p. 286, note.]
304 (return)
[ 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.]
305 (return)
[ 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 sex and
also that she was given to embroidering.]
306 (return)
[ Preface to Midian
Revisited, xxxiv.]
307 (return)
[ Ex Ponto III., i., 19.]
308 (return)
[ The Gold Mines of
Midian and the Ruined Midianite Cities (C. Kegan Paul and Co.) It appeared
in 1878.]
309 (return)
[ The Land of Midian
Revisited, ii., 254.]
310 (return)
[ Kindly copied for me by
Miss Gordon, his daughter.]
311 (return)
[ They left on July 6th
(1878) and touched at Venice, Brindisi, Palermo and Gibraltar.]
312 (return)
[ November 1876.]
313 (return)
[ From the then
unpublished Kasidah.]
314 (return)
[ The famous Yogis. Their
blood is dried up by the scorching sun of India, they pass their time in
mediation, prayer and religious abstinence, until their body is wasted,
and they fancy themselves favoured with divine revelations.]
315 (return)
[ The Spiritualist. 13th
December 1878.]
316 (return)
[ In short, she had
considerable natural gifts, which were never properly cultivated.]
317 (return)
[ See Chapter xxxviii.]
318 (return)
[ Arabia, Egypt, India.]
319 (return)
[ Letter to Miss
Stisted.]
320 (return)
[ She says, I left my
Indian Christmas Book with Mr. Bogue on 7th July 1882, and never saw it
after.]
321 (return)
[ Burton dedicated to
Yacoub Pasha Vol. x. of his Arabian Nights. They had then been friends for
12 years.]
322 (return)
[ Inferno, xix.]
323 (return)
[ Canto x., stanza 153.]
324 (return)
[ Canto x., stanzas
108-118.]
325 (return)
[ Between the Indus and
the Ganges.]
326 (return)
[ A Glance at the Passion
Play, 1881.]
327 (return)
[ The Passion Play at
Ober Ammergau, 1900.]
328 (return)
[ A Fireside King, 3
vol., Tinsley 1880. Brit. Mus. 12640 i. 7.]
329 (return)
[ See Chapter xx., 96.
Maria Stisted died 12th November 1878.]
330 (return)
[ See Chapter xli.]
331 (return)
[ Only an admirer of Omar
Khayyam could have written The Kasidah, observes Mr. Justin McCarthy,
junior; but the only Omar Khayyam that Burton knew previous to 1859, was
Edward FitzGerald. I am positive that Burton never read Omar Khayyam
before 1859, and I doubt whether he ever read the original at all.]
332 (return)
[ For example:—
"That eve so gay, so bright, so glad, this morn so dim and sad and grey;
Strange that life's Register should write this day a day, that day a day."
Amusingly enough, he himself quotes this as from Hafiz in a letter to Sir Walter Besant. See Literary Remains of Tyrwhitt Drake, p. 16. See also Chapter ix.]
333 (return)
[ We use the word by
courtesy.]
334 (return)
[ See Life, ii., 467, and
end of 1st volume of Supplemental Nights. Burton makes no secret of this.
There is no suggestion that they are founded upon the original of Omar
Khayyam. Indeed, it is probable that Burton had never, before the
publication of The Kasidah, even heard of the original, for he imagined
like J. A. Symonds and others, that FitzGerald's version was a fairly
literal translation. When, therefore, he speaks of Omar Khayyam he means
Edward FitzGerald. I have dealt with this subject exhaustively in my Life
of Edward FitzGerald.]
335 (return)
[ Couplet 186.]
336 (return)
[ Preserved in the Museum
at Camberwell. It is inserted in a copy of Camoens.]
337 (return)
[ Italy having sided with
Prussia in the war of 1866 received as her reward the long coveted
territory of Venice.]
338 (return)
[ Born 1844. Appointed to
the command of an East Coast expedition to relieve Livingstone, 1872.
Crossed Africa 1875.]
339 (return)
[ "Burton as I knew him,"
by V. L. Cameron.]
340 (return)
[ Nearly all his friends
noticed this feature in his character and have remarked it to me.]
341 (return)
[ The number is dated 5th
November 1881. Mr. Payne had published specimens of his proposed
Translation, anonymously, in the New Quarterly Review for January and
April, 1879.]
342 (return)
[ This was a mistake.
Burton thought he had texts of the whole, but, as we shall presently show,
there were several texts which up to this time he had not seen. His
attention, as his letters indicate, was first drawn to them by Mr. Payne.]
343 (return)
[ In the light of what
follows, this remark is amusing.]
344 (return)
[ See Chapter xxiii,
107.]
345 (return)
[ In the Masque of
Shadows.]
346 (return)
[ New Poems, p. 19.]
347 (return)
[ The Masque of Shadows,
p. 59.]
348 (return)
[ Published 1878.]
349 (return)
[ New Poems, p. 179.]
350 (return)
[ Published 1871.]
351 (return)
[ Mr. Watts-Dunton, the
Earl of Crewe, and Dr. Richard Garnett have also written enthusiastically
of Mr. Payne's poetry.]
352 (return)
[ Of "The John Payne
Society" (founded in 1905) and its publications particulars can be
obtained from The Secretary, Cowper School, Olney. It has no connection
with the "Villon Society," which publishes Mr. Payne's works.]
353 (return)
[ See Chapter xi., 43.]
354 (return)
[ Dr. Badger died 19th
February, 1888, aged 73.]
355 (return)
[ To Payne. 20th August
1883.]
356 (return)
[ No doubt the "two or
three pages" which he showed to Mr. Watts-Dunton.]
357 (return)
[ This is a very
important fact. It is almost incredible, and yet it is certainly true.]
358 (return)
[ Prospectuses.]
359 (return)
[ Its baths were good for
gout and rheumatism. Mrs. Burton returned to Trieste on September 11th.]
360 (return)
[ This is, of course, a
jest. He repeats the jest, with variation, in subsequent letters.]
361 (return)
[ The author wishes to
say that the names of several persons are hidden by the dashes in these
chapters, and he has taken every care to render it impossible for the
public to know who in any particular instance is intended.]
362 (return)
[ Of course, in his
heart, Burton respected Lane as a scholar.]
363 (return)
[ Apparently Galland's.]
364 (return)
[ Mr. Payne's system is
fully explained in the Introductory Note to Vol. i. and is consistently
followed through the 13 volumes (Arabian Nights, 9 vols.; Tales from the
Arabic, 3 vols.; Alaeddin and Zein-ul-Asnam, i vol.).]
365 (return)
[ One of the poets of The
Arabian Nights.]
366 (return)
[ See Chapter iii. 11.]
367 (return)
[ He published some of
this information in his Terminal Essay.]
368 (return)
[ Perhaps we ought again
to state most emphatically that Burton's outlook was strictly that of the
student. He was angry because he had, as he believed, certain great truths
to tell concerning the geographical limits of certain vices, and an
endeavour was being made to prevent him from publishing them.]
369 (return)
[ Burton's A. N. vi.,
180; Lib. Ed. v., 91, The Three Wishes, or the Man who longed to see the
Night of Power.]
370 (return)
[ The Lady and her Five
Suitors, Burton's A. N., vi., 172; Lib. Ed., v., 83; Payne's A. N., v.,
306. Of course Mr. Payne declined to do this.]
371 (return)
[ Possibly this was
merely pantomime. Besant, in his Life of Palmer, p. 322, assumes that Matr
Nassar, or Meter, as he calls him, was a traitor.]
372 (return)
[ Cloak.]
373 (return)
[ Cursing is with
Orientals a powerful weapon of defence. Palmer was driven to it as his
last resource. If he could not deter his enemies in this way he could do
no more.]
374 (return)
[ Burton's Report and
Besant's Life of Palmer, p. 328.]
375 (return)
[ See Chapter vi., 22.]
376 (return)
[ Palmer translated only
a few songs in Hafiz. Two will be found in that well-known Bibelot,
Persian Love Songs.]
377 (return)
[ There were two editions
of Mr. Payne's Villon. Burton is referring to the first.]
378 (return)
[ Augmentative of
palazzo, a gentleman's house.]
379 (return)
[ We have altered this
anecdote a little so as to prevent the possibility of the blanks being
filled up.]
380 (return)
[ That which is
knowable.]
381 (return)
[ Let it be remembered
that the edition was (to quote the title-page) printed by private
subscription and for private circulation only and was limited to 500
copies at a high price. Consequently the work was never in the hands of
the general public.]
382 (return)
[ This was a favourite
saying of Burton's. We shall run against it elsewhere. See Chapter xxxiv.,
159. Curiously enough, there is a similar remark in Mr. Payne's Study of
Rabelais written eighteen years previous, and still unpublished.]
383 (return)
[ Practically there was
only the wearisome, garbled, incomplete and incorrect translation by Dr.
Weil.]
384 (return)
[ The Love of Jubayr and
the Lady Budur, Burton's A. N. iv., 234; Lib. Ed., iii., 350; Payne's A.
N., iv., 82.]
385 (return)
[ Three vols., 1884.]
386 (return)
[ The public were to some
extent justified in their attitude. They feared that these books would
find their way into the hands of others than bona fide students. Their
fears, however, had no foundation. In all the libraries visited by me
extreme care was taken that none but the genuine student should see these
books; and, of course, they are not purchasable anywhere except at prices
which none but a student, obliged to have them, would dream of giving.]
387 (return)
[ He married in 1879,
Ellinor, widow of James Alexander Guthrie, Esp., of Craigie, Forfarshire,
and daughter of Admiral Sir James Stirling.]
388 (return)
[ Early Ideas by an
Aryan, 1881. Alluded to by Burton in A. N., Lib. Ed., ix., 209, note.]