[39] Bishop Selwyn (Primate), Bishop Abraham of Wellington, and Bishop Hobhouse of Nelson.
[40] This island had lately been colonized by settlers from Pitcairn Island, descended from the mutineers of the Bounty, marooned in 1789.
[41] Life of John Coleridge Patteson, by Charlotte Yonge, 2 vols. (Macmillan, 1874).
[42] The Latin form in which this epigram was originally couched—mentiendi causa—does away with all ambiguity.
[43] The ill-fated Emperor Frederick III, who died of cancer in 1888.
[44] Memoirs of Sir Robert Morier, 1826-76, by his daughter, Lady Rosslyn Wemyss, vol. i, p. 303 (Edward Arnold, 1911).
[45] Sir James Hudson, G.C.B., British minister at Turin during the years of Cavour's great ministry; died 1885.
[46] Sir Horace Rumbold, G.C.B., Ambassador at Vienna 1896-1900; died 1913.
[47] W. E. Henley, poet and critic, 1849-1903. His poems, 'In Hospital' include also a very beautiful sonnet on 'The Chief'—Lister himself, which almost calls up his portrait to one who has once seen it: 'His brow spreads large and placid.... Soft lines of tranquil thought.... His face at once benign and proud and shy.... His wise rare smile.'
[48] Professor Volkmann of Halle and Professor von Nussbaum of Munich.