[224] "History of European Morals," I. p. 302 et seq.
[225] Ibid. p. 236.
[226] Compare, however, "History of European Morals," I. p. 263: "Ionian slaves of a surpassing beauty, Alexandrian slaves, famous for their subtle skill in stimulating the jaded senses of the confirmed and sated libertine, became the ornaments of every patrician house, the companions and instructors of the young.... The slave population was itself a hotbed of vice, and it contaminated all with which it came in contact."
[227] "History of European Morals," I. p. 303 et seq. The italics are mine.
[228] L. O. Pike, "Crime in England," I. p. 20.
[229] "History of European Morals," II. p. 299.
[230] L. O. Pike, "A History of Crime in England," I. pp. 51, 344 et seq.; II. pp. 138, 176, 177, 287, 379 et seq.
[231] Ibid. II. pp. 81, 82.
[232] Ibid. I. p. 226; II. pp. 85, 86, 174 et seq., 324 et seq.
[233] Ibid. I. pp. 168, 169.