[66] Relation of Seven Years Slavery: Osborne's Voyages, Vol. II. p. 489.

[67] Sewel's History of the Quakers, p. 397.

[68] Biot, De l'Abolition de l'Esclavage Ancien en Occident, p. 437.

[69] Haedo, Dialogo I. de la Captividad: Historia de Argel, pp 142-144.

[70] Roscoe, Life of Cervantes, p. 50. See his story of Española Inglesa.

[71] Gentleman's Magazine, Vol. XVIII. p. 413.

[72] Southerne, Oroonoko, Act III. Sc. 2. It is not strange that the anti-slavery character of this play rendered it unpopular at Liverpool, while prosperous merchants there were concerned in the slave-trade.

[73] Don Quixote, Part I. Book IV. Chap. 12.

[74] True Account of the Captivity of Thomas Phelps: Osborne's Voyages, Vol. II. p. 500.

[75] Roscoe, Life of Cervantes, pp. 32, 310, 311. In the same spirit Thomas Phelps says, "I looked upon my condition as desperate; my forlorn and languishing state of life, without any hope of redemption, appeared far worse than the terrors of a most cruel death."—Osborne's Voyages, Vol. II. p. 504.