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{259} Kamilaroi and Kurnai. Natives call these objects their kin, 'of one flesh' with them.
{260} Studies, p. 11.
{265a} O'Curry, Manners of Ancient Irish, l. ccclxx., quoting Trin. Coll. Dublin MS.
{265b} See also Elton's Origins of English History, pp. 299-301.
{265c} Kemble's Saxons in England, p. 258. Politics of Aristotle, Bolland and Lang, p. 99. {265d}
{265d} Mr. Grant Allen kindly supplied me some time ago with a list of animal and vegetable names preserved in the t.i.tles of ancient English village settlements. Among them are: ash, birch, bear (as among the Iroquois), oak, buck, fir, fern, sun, wolf, thorn, goat, horse, salmon (the trout is a totem in America), swan (familiar in Australia), and others.
{267} 'Gentiles sunt qui inter se eodem nomine sunt. Qui ab ingeniis oriundi sunt. Quorum majorum nemo servitutem servivit. Qui capite non sunt deminuti.'
{268} Studies in Ancient History, p. 212.
{270} Fortnightly Review, October 1869: 'Archaeologia Americana,' ii. 113.
{273a} Suidas, 3102.
{273b} Herod., i. 173.
{273c} Cf. Bachofen, p. 309.
{273d} Compare the Irish Nennius, p. 127.
{276} The ill.u.s.trations in this article are for the most part copied, by permission of Messrs. Ca.s.sell & Co., from the Magazine of Art, in which the essay appeared.
{286} Part of the pattern (Fig. 5, b) recurs on the New Zealand Bull-roarer, engraved in the essay on the Bull-roarer.
{289} See Schliemann's Troja, wherein is much learning and fancy about the Aryan Svastika.