[277]. Rob. DeC. Ward, op. cit., pp. 309 et seq.

[278]. Vide his Weather Influences, An Empirical Study of the Mental and Physiological Effects of Definite Meteorological Conditions, with Introduction by Cleveland Abbe (N. Y.: Macmillan, 1904, 277 pp.).

[279]. I saw somewhere that exception had been taken to his results, but I failed at the time to make a note thereof and have been unable to find the passage again.

[280]. Ibid., p. 266; 269; 272 f.—The fifth and last is not cited here.

[281]. Ward, op. cit., p. 310; 335, where ref. is also made to F. A. Cook’s article on “Some Physiological Effects of Arctic Cold, Darkness and Light” (MED. REC., June 12, 1897, pp. 833–36).

[282]. London and N. Y., 1892.

[283]. Ibid., p. 90.

[284]. Ibid., pp. 113–5.

[285]. “Diese Priorität (der erste Versuch überhaupt, die Einflüsse des naturalen Milieus auf die Psyche darzustellen) gebührt, nach mancherlei Vorläufern minder geschlossenen Charakters (z. B. Quételet, Sur l’homme etc. 1835, Bd. 2, Kap. 3, Abschn. 2–3, Influence du climat et des saisons sur le penchant au crime) ohne Zweifel Lombroso, aus dessen 1878 erschienenem Buche ‘Pensiero e meteore’ Extracte auch in seine andern Publikationen, namentlich in ‘Genio e follia,’ übergegangen sind.”—Hellpach, Die Geopsychischen Erscheinungen (Leipzig, 1911), p. 336.

[286]. Criminal Man, According to the Classification of Cesare Lombroso Briefly Summarized by his Daughter Gina Lombroso Ferrero (“The Science Series”; N. Y. and London: G. P. Putnam’s Sons, 1911, 322 pp.), p. 145.—Lombroso’s L’Uomo di genio appeared in 1888, L’Uomo delinquente in 1889, and La Donna delinquente in 1893.