[71] Paris, 1886. The number of monographs on this subject is, however, very large, and I should like at least to add Mr Wallis Budge's Alexander the Great (the Syriac version of Callisthenes), Cambridge, 1889, and his subsequent Life and Exploits of Alexander.

[72] Most conveniently accessible in the Teubner collection, ed. Kübler, Leipzig, 1888.

[73] Ed. Michelant, Stuttgart, 1846.

[74] Ed. Weber, op. cit. sup., i. 1-327.

[75] Ed. Meyer, op. cit., i. 1-9.

[76] Ll. 27-30.

[77] Meyer, i. 25-59.

[78] See Henry V. for the tennis-ball incident.

[79] In this paragraph I again speak at second-hand, for neither the Vœux nor Florimont is to my knowledge yet in print. The former seems to have supplied most of the material of the poem in fifteenth-century Scots, printed by the Bannatyne Club in 1831, and to be reprinted, in another version, by the Scottish Text Society.

[80] E.E.T.S., 1878, edited by Professor Skeat.