[17] Myths of the New World, p. 166.

[18] P. 393 of Monumental Christianity, or the Art and Symbolism of the Primitive Church as Witness and Teachers of the One Catholic Faith and Practice.

[19] In his book, Bushido, pp. 15–19 and 24.

[20] P. 152 of his book, King David of Israel (Watts, 1905).

[21] The Gods of the Egyptians, vol. ii., p. 220.

[22] Ibid., vol. i., Preface, p. xv.

[23] They appear in Part II., pp. 171, 183, 188, 300, and 302.

[24] A translation of the Chinese version of the “Abbinishkramana Sûtra.” For the probable date, see Appendix.

[25] See Herbert Spencer’s Principles of Sociology, Vol. I., Part I., chapter on “The Primitive Man—Emotional.”

[26] Professor Robertson Smith, in The Religion of the Semites, p. 347. Dr. W. R. Smith was a distinguished Scottish Biblical scholar and Orientalist. From 1881 he was associated as joint editor of the ninth edition of the Encyclopædia Britannica with Professor Spencer Baynes, after whose death in 1887 he was sole editor.