[552]. Inghirami, Mus. Chius. cxxv.; Krause, ix. c. 25.

[553]. J.H.S. xxiv. p. 187.

[554]. J.H.S. xxvii. p. 260.

[555]. J.H.S. xxiii. p. 288, Fig. 15.

[556]. Mr. George Rowdon, who formerly held the championship for the high jump, once gave me the following description of the method of using weights in the high jump: “The jumper starts about 14 yards from the posts, taking two-thirds of the distance with short, quick steps, scarcely swinging the weights at all, after which he takes one or two comparatively long, slow strides, swinging the bells together twice, and on the second swing taking off from the ground as the bells come to the front.” The weights used are usually 5 lb. dumb-bells or even heavier. The run for the long jump with such weights would be very similar, the chief difference being that while in the high jump the weights are thrown away at the moment of jumping, in the long jump they are retained.

[557]. J.H.S. xxiv. pp. 193, 194.

[558]. Anth. Pal. App. 297—

πέντ’ ἐπὶ πεντήκοντα πόδας πήδησε Φάϋλλος

δίσκευσεν δ’ ἑκατὸν πέντ’ ἀπολειπομένων.

The argument in the following passage is stated more fully in J.H.S. xxiv. pp. 77 ff., where the reader will find full references.