INDEX. 
RÎmity, 14. — IiïsuUing manners of 
the women, 18. — Treatment of their 
European slaves, ibid — Their dread- 
ful retaliation of French perfidy and 
craelty, '25.-— Account of the differ- 
ent tribes on the right bank of the 
Sene^dl, 129. — Specimen of their 
pride and ignorance, 132. — Their 
trade, manufactures, agriculture, 
provisions, &.c. 133. — Manner of 
conducting warfare, 134. — Costume, 
136. — Religion, 138. — Moors and 
Kegroes, comparison between the, 
173. — Morocco, sketch of the city 
cf, 21 . — Remarks on the inhabitants, 
2^. — Morocco, the emi>eror of, his 
ridiculous pretensions to learning, 
&:c. 21. — Musk, process for obtain- 
ing it, 154-. 
Kegvoes^ their natural aversion to la- 
bour, 88. — ^Negroes, free, contrast- 
ed with slaves, 99. — Negroes and 
Moors, comparison drawn between 
the, 173. — G enerosity of the former, 
175.— Normans, the fu st discoverers 
of the coast of Afiica near the Gam- 
bia, 37. 
Ordeal, mode of trial in Africa by, 
106, — Ormond, his success in com- 
jnerce on the river of Sierra Leone, 
and tragical end, 81. — On nee, em- 
ployment of that animal by the 
Persians for lumti ng, 1 5.5. — Oyster- 
shells, remarks relative to an inex- 
haustible quarry of, 11?. 
Palm-wine, manner of obtaining it, 
its eflTect upon the constitution, 167. 
— Parroqnet, account of a newly dis- 
covered species of, 128. — Pasqua, 
Tîew of the country surrounding the 
■^•illage, its productions, &c. 47. — 
Phenomenon, singular in the isle of 
BIssaux, 65. — Piracy, French, dis- 
fçraceful accoimt of, 55. — Pisania, 
description of the English factory, 
ct>mmerce, &c. 44. — Portendick, de- 
scription of the bays of, its fjiTner 
rommercial establishment, 24. — 
Struggles between the Dutch and 
French for its possession, ib. — Its 
produce and trade, 26. — Portuguese 
in Afijca, general remarks ou the, 
4K — On their manners and com- 
merce, 51.— Purrah, account of the 
mstitufioa so called, 97. ( 
Rio-Grande, trade carried on hy way 
of the, 73. — Royalty, singular order 
of succession to, 65. — Rubault, his 
departure from Isle St. Louis, to 
travel by land to Galam, 146. — Suc- 
cess of his journey to Galam, 168. — 
jSccount of his murder, l(i9. 
Salt, peculiar method of making it by 
the Mandxngos, 40. — Singular species 
of, an antedotti-against poison, 74. — 
Salt-pits at Gandiolle, the, allotted 
for the dowry of the queen of Cay- 
or, 31. — Salum, dominions of the 
king of, 35. — Salutation, curious 
method of, 54. — Sea-horse, see Hip' 
popolanvts. — Senegal, the, descrip- 
tion of the bar of that river and its 
banks, 110. — Senegal river, its 
course, distinction between it and 
the Niger, 121. — Serays, see Cor- 
ses. — Serpents, indifterence of the 
Negroes to them between Goree and 
Senegal, 30. — Sharp, Mr. G. his 
establishment of a colony at Sierra 
Leone, 83. — Sidi Carachi, * account 
of his journey from isle St. Louis to 
Galam, 164. — Sierra Leone, the ri- 
ver of, its discovery, 81. — Account 
of the different establishments of 
Europeans in that quarter, 82. — 
Present state of tl>e English colony, 
86. — Productions of the banks of 
the river, 89. — Animal productions, 
91. — Sin, sketch of the kingdom, 35. 
— Slave-trade, ingenious remarks on 
the, 109. 
Tamara, site of the isle, and produc- 
tions, 75. — Tin, king, his usurpa- 
tion of the kingxlom of Cayor, 149. 
■ — Travelling in Africa, the difficul- 
ties of, described, 14. — Trollope, 
captain, his generous treatment of 
some shipwrecked Frenchmen, 179. 
Villages of the Negroes, description 
of the, 147, 153. 
Wadelims, maimers, customs, Sec, 
of the, 129. — Wedding, description 
of a Moorish, 130. 
Yolof, account of a revolution in, 148. 
— Brief remarks on the character of, 
&c. 43, 122.— Youly, general re- 
marks on the kingdom of, 157. 
Zapes, account of the different hordes 
called, 7 k 
