W
- Wahi, [592]
- Wales, the Prince of, [585], [687]
- Wali, the, 372, [391], [392];
- his daughter’s wedding, [459], [464];
- his dispute with Burton, [517]
- Warren, Sir Charles, [638]
- Waterton, Canon, [743], [760]
- Wikar Shums Ool Umárá, the, [582]
- Wilson, Miss Ellen, [435]
- —— Sir Andrew, [660]
- Windsor, Lady, [760]
- Wiseman, Cardinal, [713]
- Wright, Rev. W., [522]
- Wuld Ali, [461]
- Würtemberg, Duke of, [560]
Z
Printed by Hazell, Watson, & Viney, Ld., London and Aylesbury.
FOOTNOTES:
[1] [Miss Stisted speaks of her as “Jane Digby, who capped her wild career by marrying a camel-driver,” and animadverts on Lady Burton for befriending her. The Shaykh was never a camel-driver in his life, and few, I think, will blame Lady Burton for her kindness to this poor lady, her countrywoman, in a strange land.]
[2] The Inner Life of Syria, Palestine, and the Holy Land, by Isabel Burton, 2 vols.
[3] Lady Ellenborough referred to her biography, which she had dictated to Lady Burton—the true story of her life, which Lady Burton had promised to publish for her, to clear away misrepresentations. In consequence of difficulties which subsequently arose Lady Burton did not publish it.
[4] Miss Stisted’s Life of Sir Richard Burton, p. 360. This book was published December, 1896, eight months after Lady Burton’s death.