a troublesome levee, for I was obliged to take off one of .my stockings, and show them my foot, and even to take off my jacket and waistcoat, to show them how my clothes were put on and off; they were much delighted with the curious con*- trivance of buttons. All this was to be repeated to every succeeding visitor ; for such as had already seen these wonders, insisted on their friends seeing the same ; and in this manner I was employed, dressing and undressing, buttoning and unbuttoning, from noon to night. About eight o’clock, Ali sent me for supper, some kouskous and salt and water, which was very acceptable, being the only victuals I had tasted since morning. I observed that, in the night, the Moors kept regular watch, and frequently looked into the hut, to see if I was asleep, and if it was quite dark, they would light a wisp of grass. About two o’clock in the morning, a Moor entered the hut, probably with a view to steal something, or perhaps to murder me ; and groping about, he laid his hand upon my shoulder. As night visitors were at best but suspicious characters, I sprang up the moment he laid his hand upon me ; and the Moor, in his haste to get off; stumbled over my boy, and fell with his face upon the wild hog, which returned the attack by biting the Moor’s arm. The screams of this man alarmed the people in the King s tent, who immediately conjectured that I had made my escape, and a number of them mounted their horses, and prepared to pursue me. I observed upon this occasion that Ali did not sleep in his own tent, but came galloping upon a white horse from a small tent at a considerable distance; indeed, the tyrannical and cruel behaviour of this man made him so jealous of every person around him, that even his own slaves and domestics knew not where he slept. When the Moors had explained to him the cause of this outcry, they all went away, and I was permitted to sleep quietly until morning. - - jp | 1 - L'-' March 13th. With the returning day commenced the same round, b f insult airf. irritatibh : the boys assembled to beat the hog, and the meri and women to plague the Christian. Tt is impossible for me to describe the behaviour o f a people who study mischief a s a science, and exult in the miseries and misfortunes of their fellow-creatures. It is sufficient to observe, that the rudeness, ferocity, and fanaticism, which distinguish the Moors from the rest of mankind, found, here a proper subject whereon to exercise their propensities. I was a stranger, I was ’unprotected, and I was a Christian,■ each of these circum— stances ‘is; sufficient to drive every spark of humanity from the heart of a Moor ; 1 but: when a lh o f ;*hem,:as in my case, were combined in the same person, and a suspicion prevailed withal, -that I had come as a spy into the country, the reader will easily, imagine that, in such a situation, I had every thing to fear. Anxious, however, to conciliate favour, and, if possible, to afford the Moors no pretence for ill treating me, I readily complied with every command, and patiently bore every insult -; but never did any period of my life pass away so heavily | from sunrise to sunset, was I obliged to suffer, with an unruffled countenance, the insults of the rudest savages on earth.
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