[146]: That part of the nose happens also to be called its root in German.—Tr.
[147]: The rough breathing (in Greek) which has a crooked shape, thus: (').-Tr.
[148]: The Pharisees did it,—like certain Jews, who also always walked bent, and so were called crooklings,—in order to leave a little room for God who fills the whole earth.—Ancient and Modern Judaism, Vol. II. p. 47.
[149]: Thus did Emanuel always name St. John's day, though not with perfect astronomical accuracy.
[150]: See Dr. Thomas Brown's Mental Philosophy on the subject of consciousness.—Tr.
[151]: In the second part of the second volume.
[152]: [Page 266].—Tr.
[153]: I. e. On the dial-plate of our inner life.—Tr.
[154]: Complementary parts in music.—Tr.
[155]: The sun when eclipsed by the moon is beheld by us in a crape-covered [or smoked] glass.