[643] Ib., pp. 94, 108.

[644] Sir J. Evans, Anc. Stone Implements, 1897, pp. 438-9; Anc. Bronze Implements, p. 383.

[645] Sir A. Mitchell, The Past in the Present, pp. 5-6, 12.

[646] Archaeologia, liv, 1895, pp. 108-9.

[647] Ib., xliii, 1871, p. 440; J. Evans, Anc. Bronze Implements, pp. 191-2; A. Pitt-Rivers, Excavations in Cranborne Chase, iv, 162-3.

[648] ‘So called’, says Pitt-Rivers (ib., i, 66), ‘because some of them are found with an edge as sharp as a penknife’. The thought of shaving with a bronze razor is not pleasant; but the negroes of Tanganyika still use razors of this metal (L’Anthr., xiv, 1903, pp. 667-75; xv, 1904, p. 116); and everybody knows that the Flamen Dialis might only shave with a bronze knife. See J. G. Frazer, The Golden Bough, i, 1900, p. 242.

[649] Archaeologia, xliii, 1871, p. 451; liv, 1895, p. 99; J. Evans, Anc. Bronze Implements, pp. 217-21, 480.

[650] See p. 156, supra. Cf. W. Greenwell, Brit. Barrows, pp. 118, 142.

[651] Ib., p. 411.

[652] See p. 189, infra.