Each to the other like, more than on earth is thought."
161. Bunsen, Egypt's Place, Vol. V. p. 129, note.
162. This Museum also contains three large mummies of the sacred bull of Apis, a gold ring of Suphis, a gold necklace with the name of Menes, and many other remarkable antiquities.
163. Book of Job, Chap. xxix.
164. Brugsch, as above.
165. Lenormant, Ancient History of the East, I. 234, in the English translation.
166. Translated by De Rougé. See Revue Contemporaine, August, 1856.
167. Egypt 3300 Years ago. By Lanoye.
168. Beside the monuments and the papyri, we have as sources of information the remains of the Egyptian historians Manetho and Eratosthenes; the Greek accounts of Egypt by Herodotus, Plato, Diodorus Siculus, Plutarch, Jamblichus; and the modern researches of Heeren, Champollion, Rossalini, Young, Wilkinson. The more recent writers to be consulted are as follows:—
Bunsen's "Ægypten's Stelle in der Weltgeschichte. Hamburg." (First volume printed in 1845.) This great work was translated by C. C. Cottrel in five 8vo volumes, the last published in 1867, after the death of both author and translator. The fifth volume of the translation contains a full translation of the "Book of the Dead," by the learned Samuel Birch of the British Museum.