[33]This figure is said by Diogenes Lærtios II, 37 to have been used by Socrates himself about his relation to Xanthippe.
[34]The following sentences are not as clear in meaning as is otherwise the case in Kierkegaard.
[35]Poetics, chap. 15.
[36]Cf. "The Banquet"
[37]They are, that he had been created a man and not an animal, a man and not a woman, a Greek and not a Barbarian (Lactantius, Instit. Ill, 19, 17).
[38]Thales of Miletos (Diogenes Lærtios I, 33).
[39]German poet of the Romantic School (1773-1853).
[40]Reasoning against the rules of logic.
[41]"The Lying-in Room", II, 2.
[42]A quotation from Oehlenschläager's "Aladdin."