[137]. Robertson, Buckle and his Critics (London, 1895), p. 8 n.

[138]. 4. vols., 1822–3.

[139]. Flint, l.c., pp. 577–9. See also p. 576.

[140]. Vide supra my note no. 84.

[141]. Flint, l.c., p. 467.

[142]. The History of Civilization from the Fall of the Roman Empire to the French Revolution (4 vols., translated by Wm. Hazlitt, N. Y.: D. Appleton & Co., 1867—the lectures were delivered in the years 1828, 1829, and 1830), vol. 2, pp. 109 f.

[143]. “Gothein had attracted attention by a study of the civilisation of Southern Italy, which he had traversed on foot as Riehl had traversed the Palatinate.”—Gooch, l.c., p. 587.

[144]. “Voila pourquoi il [Michelet] va en Italie avant d’écrire son Histoire Romaine; il veut avoir l’impression, le contact du sol, du climat, du paysage.”—Lanson, Hist. de la Litt. Franç. (1912), p. 1021 n.

[145]. Abry-Audic-Crouzet, Littérature Française (3e éd., Paris, 1916), p. 580.

[146]. Jules Simon, Mignet, Michelet, Henri Martin (Paris, 1890), p. 191.