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Footnotes

[15]

Monsieur Bernier, travelling from Lahore to Cashmere, wrote thus: "My body is a sieve; scarcely have I swallowed a pint of water, but I see it transude like dew out of all my limbs, even to my fingers' ends. I drink ten pints a day, and it does me no manner of harm." -- Bernier, "Travels," tome ii, p. 261.

[16]

In the blood there are red globules, fibrous parts, white globules, and water, in which the whole swims.

[17]

Plato, "Laws," Book ii; Aristotle, "Of the Care of Domestic Affairs"; Eusebius, "Evangelical Preparation," Book xii, chap. 17.

[18]

This is seen in the Hottentots, and the inhabitants of the most southern part of Chili.

[19]

As Pittacus did, according to Aristotle, "Politics," lib. i, cap. iii. He lived in a climate where drunkenness is not a national vice.