[34] Problems of Life and Mind, ii. iii. iv. of Third Series, p. 85.

[35] Life and Habit, p. 55.

[36] Unconscious Memory, p. 30.

[37] Thus a man wishing to aid another, but who by miscalculation causes his death, does an action which is “materially” homicidal, though “formally” his action is a virtuous one. Similarly a man may be “materially” a bigamist but not “formally,” as when he has married a second wife being honestly convinced that his first wife was dead.

[38] Lessons from Nature, ch. xii. p. 374. John Murray, 1876.

[39] Kamilaroi and Kurnai, p. 254.

[40] Autobiographic Sketches, p. 337.

[41] Rink, Tales and Traditions of the Eskimo, p. 43.

[42] “And all the house showed clear as in the light of dawn.”—Theoc. xix. 30-40, ed. Ahrens.

Transcriber's Notes