[56-1] Lessing’s Gesammelte Werke. B. ii. s. 443 (Leipzig, 1855).

[57-1] See Exodus, xxiii. 12; Psalms, lv. 6; Isaiah, xxx. 15; Jeremiah, vi. 16; Hebrews, v. 9. So St. Augustine: “et nos post opera nostra sabbato vitæ eternæ requiescamus in te.” Confessionum Lib. xiii. cap. 36.

[59-1] “Filioli, diligite alterutrum.” This is the “testamentum Johannis,” as recorded from tradition by St. Jerome in his notes to the Epistle to the Galatians.

[59-2] Alexander Bain, The Senses and the Intellect, Chap. I.

[60-1] A Christian Directory. Part I. Chap. III.

[60-2] “The very nature of affection, the idea itself, necessarily implies resting in its object as an end.” Fifteen Sermons by Joseph Butler, late Lord Bishop of Durham, Preface, and p. 147 (London, 1841).

[61-1] Dr. J. Milner Fothergill, Journal of Mental Science, Oct. 1874, p. 198.

[62-1] The most recent work on the topic is that of Messrs. Westropp and Wake, The Influence of the Phallic Idea on the Religions of Antiquity, London, 1874.

[63-1] Schoolcraft’s History and Statistics of the Indian Tribes, Vol. iv. p. 224.

[63-2] Richardson, Arctic Expedition, p. 412.