[306] Plan II.
[307] [Plan III]. (see [p. 306]).
[308] XIII. p. 599, ed. Forbiger.
[309] Certainly not; but they may have served for burning charcoal or incense.—[Ed.]
[310] See the similar example, No. 208, p. 294.
[311] This refers, of course, to Dr. Schliemann’s Atlas of photographic illustrations, of which all the most valuable are reproduced in the present translation in a greatly improved style of execution.—[Ed.]
[312] Æneid, III. 302-305:—
“Ante urbem in luco, falsi Simoëntis ad undam,
Libabat cineri Andromache manesque vocabat
Hectoreum ad tumulum, viridi quem cæspite inanem,
Et geminas, causam lacrimis, sacraverat aras.”
[313] The gramme = 15·43235 grains; or, approximately, 15-1/4 grains. The ounce (avoirdupois) = 437-1/2 grains; and the pound, 16 oz., = 7000 grs.