[12] “Homosexual,” generally used in scientific works, is of course a bastard word. “Homogenic” has been suggested, as being from two roots, both Greek, i.e., “homos,” same, and “genos,” sex.
[13] “Athenæus” xiii., ch. 78.
[14] See Plutarch’s “Eroticus,” §xvii.
[15] See “Natural History of Man,” by J. G. Wood. Vol: “Africa,” p. 419.
[16] See also Livingstone’s “Expedition to the Zambesi” (Murray, 1865) p. 148.
[17] Though these two plays, except for some quotations, are lost.
[18] Mantegazza and Lombroso. See Albert Moll, “Conträre Sexualempfindung,” 2nd ed., p. 36.
[19] Though in translation this fact is often by pious fraudulence disguised.
[20] W. Pater’s “Renaissance,” pp. 8-16.
[21] Among prose writers of this period, Montaigne, whose treatment of the subject is enthusiastic and unequivocal, should not be overlooked. See Hazlitt’s “Montaigne,” ch. xxvii.