[7]. See Brugsch, “Mein Leben,” p. 104.
[8]. “Literature and Dogma,” 1873, pp. 305, seq.
[9]. “Literature and Dogma,” p. 143.
[10]. Schiller’s “Wallenstein,” Prolog, vv. 48, 49.
[11]. This was written in 1851, and here in 1897 that Welcome has never ceased to be a blessing to me.
[12]. I had written some articles in The Times to show that when we meet with jade tools in countries far removed from the few mines in which jade is found, we must admit that they were carried along as precious heirlooms by the earliest emigrants from Asia to Europe, by the same people who carried the tools of their mind, that is the words of their language, from their original homes to the shores of the Mediterranean, to Iceland, to Ireland, and in the end to America.
[13].
(“Professor” I would fain have said,
But the pinched line would not admit it,
And where the nail submits its head,