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Meer Hassan Ali, B.
Observations on the Mussulmauns of India: descriptive of their manners, customs, habits, and religious opinions ; made during a twelve years residence in their immediate Society (Band 1) — London, 1832

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https://doi.org/10.11588/diglit.4649#0360

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PLURALITY OF WIVES. .341

but the children of every subsequent wife are
equals in the father's estimation. Should the
husband be dissolute and have offspring by con-
cubines—which is not very common,—those
children are remembered and provided for in
the distribution of his property; and, as very
often occurs, they are cherished by the wives
with nearly as much care as their own chil-
dren ; but illegitimate offspring very seldom
marry in the same rank their father held in
society.

The latitude allowed by "the law" preserves
the many-wived Mussulmaun from the world's
censure ; and his conscience rests unaccused
when he adds to his numbers, if he cannot re-
proach himself with having neglected or un-
kindly treated any of the number bound to him,
or their children. But the privilege is not always
indulged in by the Mussulmauns; much depends
on circumstances, and more on the man's dis-
position. If it be the happy lot of a kind-
hearted good man to be married to a woman of
assimilating mind, possessing the needful requi-
sites to render home agreeable, and a prospect
 
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