[Footnote 3: Ten o'clock.]
[Footnote 4: Of Jupiter Tonans.]
[Footnote 5: The body in the Pantheon, the head in Saint Luke's church.]
[Footnote 6: Strassburg.]
[Footnote 7: The hall of the Pantheon seems too low, because a part of its steps is hidden by the rubbish.]
[Footnote 8: This opening in the roof is twenty-seven feet in diameter.]
[Footnote 9: The Pole-star, as well as other northern constellations, stands lower in the south.]
[Footnote 10: The German texts read: Reben, vines. But the conjecture Raben as the correct reading may be permitted.—ED.]
[Footnote 11: Permission The Macmillan Co., New York, and G. Bell &
Sons, Ltd., London.]
[Footnote 12: This appropriate expression was, if we mistake not, first used by M. Adam Müller in his Lectures on German Science and Literature. If, however, he gives himself out as the inventor of the thing itself, he is, to use the softest word, in error. Long before him other Germans had endeavored to reconcile the contrarieties of taste of different ages and nations, and to pay due homage to all genuine poetry and art. Between good and bad, it is true, no reconciliation is possible.]