[2053] See p. 445, supra.

[2054] Les Celtes, p. 31.

[2055] See p. 410, supra. M. d’Arbois rejects the analogy; but of course he would admit that the people of Gaul who remained behind belonged ethnologically to the same stock as those who, on his theory, invaded Britain and became the ancestors of British Goidels.

[2056] Keltic Researches, p. 110.

[2057] Ib., p. 111.

[2058] Keltic Researches, pp. 110-1.

[2059] Ib., pp. 30, 37, 5, 63-5, 78, 175.

[2060] Celtic Britain, 1904, pp. 229-31.

[2061] Keltic Researches, pp. 19-20, 27, 16-7.

[2062] Mr. Nicholson himself (ib., p. 151) calls attention to the fact that the Gallic tribes whose Goidelic character he believes himself to have proved belonged, for the most part, to the west of Gaul.