[16] Meyrick (Skelton), Engraved Illustrations of Ancient Arms, &c. (1830), vol. ii. pl. cxlix. 11.

[17] Klemm, Werkzeuge und Waffen (Sondershausen, 1858), p. 159.

[18] Turner, Nineteen Years in Polynesia (London, 1861), p. 262.

[19] Williams, Fiji and the Fijians (London, 1858), vol. i. pp. 78-9.

[20] Crawfurd, History (Edinburgh, 1820), vol. i. p. 224.

[21] Tylor, Anahuac (London, 1861), p. 70.

[22] Hdt. vii. 69: Rawlinson, Herodotus, vol. iv (2nd ed., 1862, p. 55).

[23] Petherick, Egypt, the Soudan, and Central Africa (Edinb. and London, 1861), p. 360.

[24] Le Sieur de Folard, Nouvelles Découvertes sur la Guerre (Paris, 1724), p. 48.

[25] In adopting the nomenclature of phrenology, I am not to be understood as advocating strictly the localization of the faculties which phrenology prescribes. The mind doubtless consists of a congeries of faculties, and phrenology affords the best classification of them that has yet been devised.