[817] Brand, Pop. Antiquities, II. pp. 237-45.

[818] Ibid., II. p. 240. Pagan feasts at interments were forbidden to Christians in Saxon times (Indus. Arts of the Anglo-Saxons, p. 120 n.).

[819] Forty Years in a Moorland Parish, pp. 226-7.

[820] Ibid. pp. 226-7. Cf. J. W. Clark and T. McKenny Hughes, Life and Letters of Adam Sedgwick, 1890, I. p. 27.

[821] Grant Allen, Falling in Love: Essays, new edition, 1891, p. 296-7. Cf. Imaginative description given by R. S. Lineham, The Street of Human Habitations, 1894, pp. 43-8.

[822] Indus. Arts of the Anglo-Saxons, pp. 120-1. Cf. The Celt, the Roman, and the Saxon, p. 408.

[823] Harlyn Bay, p. 35.

[824] Evol. of the Idea of God, pp. 26, 31, 32, 33.

[825] B. Spencer and F. J. Gillen, The Northern Tribes of Central Australia, 1904, pp. 588, et seqq., p. 593, and ch. xxi. generally.

[826] Harlyn Bay, p. 35. Cf. Antiquities and Curiosities of the Church, ed. W. Andrews, 1897, p. 249.