[166] Travels, p. 368.

[167] Sketches of Algiers, p. 77.

[168] Histoire d'Alger: Description de ce Royaume, etc., de ses Forces de Terre et de Mer, Mœurs et Costumes des Habitans, de Mores, des Arabes, des Juifs, des Chrétiens, de ses Lois, etc. (Paris, 1830), Chap. XXVII.

[169] Sterne, Sentimental Journey: The Passport: The Hotel at Paris.

[170] Paradise Lost, Book XII. 64-71.

[171] Noah's Travels, pp. 248, 253. Quarterly Review, Vol. XV. p. 168.—Among the concubines of a prince of Morocco were two slaves of the age of fifteen, one English and the other French. (Lempriere's Tour, p. 147.) The fate of "one Mrs. Shaw, an Irish woman," is given in words hardly polite enough to be quoted. She was swept into the harem of Muley Ismael, who "forced her to turn Moor; ... but soon after, having taken a dislike to her, he gave her to a soldier."—Braithwaite's Morocco, p. 191

[172] Braithwaite's Morocco, p. 350. See also Quarterly Review, Vol. XV. p. 168.

[173] Braithwaite, p. 222.

[174] Ibid., p. 381.

[175] Law Reporter, July, 1846, Vol. IX. p. 98.