Chapter iii
., 11.]
[Footnote 90: See Arabian Nights, Terminal Essay D, and The Romance of Isabel Lady Burton, vol. ii., p. 730.]
[Footnote 91: His Grandmother Baker had died in 1846.]
[Footnote 92: The Pains of Sleep.]
[Footnote 93: Byron: Childe Harold, iv. 56.]
[Footnote 94: Ariosto's Orlando was published in 1516; The Lusiads appeared in 1572.]
[Footnote 95: Temple Bar, vol. xcii., p. 335.]
[Footnote 96: As did that of the beauty in The Baital-Pachisi--Vikram and the Vampire. Meml. Ed., p. 228.]
[Footnote 97: Tale of Abu-el-Husn and his slave girl, Tawaddud.--The Arabian Nights.]
[Footnote 98: Life, i., 167.]
[Footnote 99: She became Mrs. Segrave.]
[Footnote 100: See Burton's Stone Talk, 1865. Probably not "Louise" at all, the name being used to suit the rhyme.]
[Footnote 101: Mrs. Burton was always very severe on her own sex.]
[Footnote 102: See Stone Talk.]
[Footnote 103: See