THE END.
ERRATA.
Vol. I. Page 185. for TAB. XLIV. read TAB. CIII. 2d Vol.
202. for TAB. XLVI. read TAB. XLIV. 2d Vol.
Vol. II. Page 49. Iter Boreale, for TAB. LXIII, read TAB. LXXIII.
71. ————— for TAB. LXXIV. read TAB. LXIX.
177. Last line, for of nature, read, of this nature.
FOOTNOTES:
[1] Covinus Cimbricus, sicut hodie utuntur.
[2] In one of the carved monuments Venus stands in an apartment of a building, seeming to be combing her hair; perhaps from a bath. However, at Rome was a statue of Venus holding a comb, not an improper utensil for the goddess of beauty, not a little of which consists in the hair. Thus says Claudian,
Thessalico roseos nectebat pectine crines.
[3] Solinus cap. XXII. de mirabilibus Britanniæ. Mela de Situ Orbis lib. III. cap. V.
[4] Iliad Σ. v. 606. & Ξ. v. 200. Florus Histor. Rom. lib. I. cap. XIII. Rutilii Numat. Itin.