[3280] Rev. arch., nouv. sér., viii, 1863, pp. 302-3.
[3281] See p. 643, supra.
[3282] See p. 616, supra.
[3283] Admiralty Tide Tables, p. 119.
[3284] The Invasion of Britain, &c., 1862, pp. 82, xcii. Lewin also remarks that ‘had he been making for Deal, he would in drifting up channel have been advancing in the right direction’. This remark is only worth noticing as an instance of Lewin’s ignorance. Any one who has the most rudimentary knowledge of the tidal streams will see that once Caesar had drifted past the Foreland, the stream would have carried him further and further away from Deal.
[3285] Archaeologia, xxxiii, 1851, p. 242.
[3286] The Invasion of Britain, &c., 1862, p. xcii.
[3287] The Invasion of Britain, &c., 1862, p. xcii.
[3288] Tidal Streams, English and Irish Channels.
[3289] Not more than about three-quarters of the whole drift, according to the harbour-master of Dover.