[ [58] Saintsbury’s Short History of French Literature, p. 405.

[ [59] In the Attic Orators, vol. ii. p. 42, I pointed out this analogy.

[ [60] Professor Sellar’s rendering, Roman Poets of the Republic, p. 55.

[ [61] Sir Walter Scott, Fenimore Cooper, Miss Sedgwick, and Hawthorne in his story of “The Gray Champion,” have all made use of this striking incident.

[ [62] Elsewhere Mr. Harrison contemptuously refers to the Descriptive Sociology as “a pile of clippings made to order.” While I have been writing, the original directions to compilers have been found by my present secretary, Mr. James Bridge; and he has drawn my attention to one of the “orders.” It says that all works are “to be read not with a view to any particular class of facts but with a view to all classes of facts.”

[ [63] Journal of Asiatic Society of Bengal, xxiv. part ii., p. 196.

[ [64] Ellis, Polynesian Researches, vol. i. p. 525.

[ [65] Journ. As. Soc. of Ben., xv. pp. 348-49.

[ [66] Bastian, Mensch, ii. 109, 113.

[ [67] Supernatural Religion, 2nd ed., vol. i. p. 12.