[Footnote 134]: So much prize-money does every professor get for every best grammar and every best compend; so for every dissertation fifty ducats, &c.—Tychse's Supplement to Bourgoing's Travels, Vol. II.

[Footnote 135]: One such, e. g. desired to see the king; he appeared on the balcony, and stayed till she was satisfied.

[Footnote 136]: A Spanish inn.

[Footnote 137]: His dog.

[Footnote 138]: Es ist zum Tollwerden and es ist zum Tollsein are the two German phrases.—Tr.

[Footnote 139]: Livonian?—Tr.

[Footnote 140]: Isola Bella in Lago Maggiore (literally, greater lake).—Tr.

[Footnote 141]: See in Howitt's "Student Life in Germany," p. 301, &c., an account of the ceremony at the singing of the "Landesvater," or consecration song, the most impressive part of which is that every student pierces his cap with his sword.—Tr.

[Footnote 142]: S—s means Siebenkäs. It is known—from the Flower-, Fruit-, and Thorn-pieces—that Schoppe at an earlier period called himself Siebenkäs,—then gave this name away to his friend Liebgeber, who resembled him even to the face, and from whom he had taken his,—and that the friend for show had a gravestone made and marked "Siebenkäs."

[Footnote 143]: See Vol. I. p. 35.