[100] Benivieni’s notes were published posthumously. Some of the spurious Greek works of the Hippocratic collection have also case notes.
[101] Tusc. 1. 1. 2.
[102] Inst. Or. I. 1. 12.
[103] Goethe, Gespräche, 3. 387.
[104] Ibid., 3. 443.
[105] Wordsworth, Table-talk.
[106] Shelley, On the Manners of the Ancients.
[107] Mill, Dissertations, ii. 283 f.
[108] Macaulay, Life and Letters, i. 43.
[109] Homer, Iliad, vi. 466 ff. (with omissions: chiefly from the translation of Lang, Leaf, and Myers). It should be remembered that, of the three figures in this scene, the husband will be dead in a few days, while within a year the wife will be a slave and the child thrown from the city wall.