[8] His views will be found stated in Selected Essays and Lectures upon Language.
[9] See his Comparative Grammar, English translation by Eastwick (3rd ed.), 1862.
[10] See "The Lesson of Jupiter," Nineteenth Century for October 1885: "To understand the origin and meaning of the names of the Greek gods and to enter into the original intention of the fables told of each, we must take into account the collateral evidence supplied by Latin, German, Sanskrit, and Zend philology." See also Lectures on Language,2nd ser., p. 406.
[11] See his Nebelsagen (1879) and Das Räthsel der Sphinx (1889).
[12] Apart from its philological efforts, the work of Müller his disciples is of permanent value, and his critics undoubtedly did a disservice to mythological science when they condemned it root and branch. The training of no student of mythology can be complete if it lacks a consideration of Müller's works, which, of course, must be perused in the light of the comparative failure of his linguistic hypotheses.
[13] Lang in Ency. Brit., (11th ed.), art. "Mythology."
[14] Ibid.
[15] Modern Mythology, pp. 55, 63.
[16] Primitive Culture(London, 1871), p. 282.
[17] Primitive Culture(London, 1871), pp. 283, 284.