[101] This simple fact of involuntary action renders the sensual nature of the function all the more apparent.—W.

[102] Compare Tyler, Anthropology; De Quatrefages, The Human Species; Peschel, The Races of Man; Lombroso, L'Uomo Delinquente; Ellis, The Criminal; the writer, "Criminal Anthropology," N. Y. Medical Record, January 13, 1894.

[103] Animal Intelligence, pp. 28, 29.

[104] All insects have periods of rest, during which they seem to be in a state of slumber. Their sleep may not be the physiological slumber of mammals, yet it effects a like purpose in all probability.—W.

[105] Silas Rosenfield, Esq., Owensboro, Kentucky.

[106] The above was written in the summer of 1897. This interesting specimen was killed by a day-laborer who had been temporarily employed to assist the gardener. An autopsy revealed a bony tumor of the right orbital arch, which, from a little distance, looked like a horn.—W.

[107] Roscoe, Life of Leo X., p. 3.


CHAPTER IX