[3172] B. G., v, 9, § 8. Cf. ii, 11, §§ 2-3.
[3173] Philologus, xxii, 1865, pp. 305-6.
[3174] B. G., iv, 28, § 2.
[3175] ‘A little lower down and more towards the west.’
[3176] ... ‘one side is opposite Gaul. One corner of this side, by Kent—the point which almost all ships from Gaul make for—has an easterly, and the lower one a southerly outlook.’
[3177] B. G., iv, 32.
[3178] The Invasion of Britain, &c., 1862, pp. 56, 62-4.
[3179] See pp. 546, 622, supra.
[3180] See pp. 622-3, supra.
[3181] Julius Caesar, 1892, p. 196.