[1268] Moseley, in ‘Jour. Anthr. Inst.,’ vol. vi. p. 398. Cf. Labillardière, loc. cit. vol. i. pp. 279, et seq.
[1269] Forbes, in ‘Jour. Anthr. Inst.,’ vol. xiv. pp. 125, et seq.
[1270] Bain, ‘The Emotions and the Will,’ p. 211.
[1271] Fries, loc. cit. p. 109.
[1272] Livingstone, loc. cit. p. 305.
[1273] Peschel, loc. cit. p. 171.
[1274] Ibid., p. 171.
[1275] Georgi, loc. cit. pp. 364, et seq. Dall, loc. cit. pp. 139, 397.
[1276] Harmon, loc. cit. p. 286.
[1277] Kane, ‘Arctic Explorations,’ vol ii. p. 114. On the East Coast of Greenland, according to Dr. Nansen (loc. cit. vol. i. p. 338; vol. ii. p. 277), the Eskimo, men and women alike, when indoors, are completely naked with the exception of the ‘nâtit,’ a narrow band about the loins, of dimensions ‘so extremely small as to make it practically invisible to the stranger’s inexperienced eye.’ Many, indeed, assume some covering when Europeans enter their dwellings, but Dr. Nansen thinks this must be rather from affectation, and a desire to please their visitors, than from any real feeling of modesty (ibid., vol. ii. pp. 277, et seq.).