[21] Lord Lawrence said: "Light taxation is, in my mind, the panacea for foreign rule in India." Bosworth Smith, Life of Lord Lawrence, vol. ii. p. 497.
[22] The essential portions of this despatch, in so far as the purposes of the present argument are concerned, are given in Sir Richard Temple's work (p. 185), and in Bosworth Smith's Life of Lord Lawrence, vol. ii. p. 186.
[23] Goldwin Smith, Lectures on the Study of History, p. 154.
[24] Morley's Life of Gladstone, vol. iii. p. 467.
[25] Weise, 1841, vol. ii. p. 303.
[26] Loci Critici, p. 40.
[27] History of Greece, vol. ii. p. 326.
[28] The use by Pericles of this metaphor rests on the authority of Aristotle (Rhet. i. 7. 34). Herodotus (vii. 162) ascribes almost the identical words to Gelo, and a similar idea is given by Euripides in Supp. 447-49.
[29] Memoirs, vol. i. p. 328.
[30] On the Sublime, xxx.