[243] “Les Antiquités Égyptiennes,” in Revue des Deux Mondes, April, 1865.
[244] Archivio di Psichiatria, vol. viii. fasc. 3.
[245] Libri, Histoire des Mathématiques, vol. iii.
[246] De Candolle, Histoire des Sciences, 1873.
[247] Joseph Jacobs, “The Comparative Distribution of Jewish Ability,” Journal of Anthropological Institute of Great Britain, 1886, pp. 351-379.
[248] Gli Israeliti di Europa, 1872.
[249] Archivio di Statistica, Rome, 1880.
[250] Die Verbreit, der Blind, &c., 1872.
[251] Renan in his Souvenirs de Jeunesse remarks that since Germany has given herself up to militarism she would have no men of genius, if it were not for the Jews, to whom she should be at least grateful. But he forgets Haeckel, Virchow, and Wagner.
[252] One case is known in which parents zealously sought to educate and favour by every means poetic genius in their son. The outcome of their fervent efforts was Chapelain, the too famous singer of the Pucelle.