[607] Ibid. p. 295.
[608] Mr P. M. Johnston gives these dates: nave, c. A.D. 1175; chancel, c. A.D. 1200-20.
[609] Hamlet, Act V. Sc. 1.
[610] Cymbeline, Act IV. Sc. 2.
[611] E. Howlett, in Curious Church Customs, ed. W. Andrews, 1898, p. 136.
[612] W. A. Craigie, Scandinavian Folk-Lore, 1896, p. 301.
[613] E. B. Tylor, Primitive Culture, II. pp. 422-3.
[614] Sir T. Browne, Hydriotaphia, c. iii.; “Works,” ed. S. Wilkin, 1884, III. p. 30.
[615] Pop. Antiquities, II. p. 318.
[616] Jour. Brit. Archaeol. Assoc. XLI. p. 53; cf. J. Romilly Allen, Monumental Hist. of the Early Brit. Church, 1889, p. 65 (concerning early Christian graves). R. A. Smith, in Vict. Hist. Herts., I. 1902, p. 258. Cf. the same writer in Surrey Archaeol. Coll., XXI. pp. 26-32.