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Thursday, 24th January, 1907
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 10 May 2010
Abstract
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- Copyright © The Society of Antiquaries of London 1905
References
page 295 note * R. L. means “reduced level,” i.e. the level taken above a fixed datum at Alexandria.
page 306 note * British Barrows, fig. 55 (urn from Bishopston, South Wilts.), p. 68. See also Rev. A. C. Smith, British and Roman Antiquities of North Wiltshire, 11.
page 306 note † Journal of the British Archæological Association, xlv. 112–123.
page 307 note * The funeral ritual of the Wagogo, for instance, is very simple. The deceased is adjured : “Sleep well. Don't trouble those whom you have left behind. Go in peace. Turn your face upwards (i.e. bless us).”—Rev. Cole, H., Journal of the Anthropological Institute, N.S. v. (1902), 313Google Scholar.
page 307 note † An interesting sidelight is thrown upon this subject by one of the Buddhist Jutakas, which tells of a certain King of Benares who was so wicked that every one rejoiced at his death except one of the doorkeepers, who wept because he feared that the King would be turned out of hell, and would come back again ! The Bodhisatta reassures the man : the King has been well cremated :
“Thousands of loads of wood have burnt him quite,
Thousands of pitchers quenched what still did burn ;
The earth is dug abont to left and right.
Fear not: The King will never more return.”
The Jātaka, ii. 67 : Tr. Rouse.
page 308 note * Rev. J. Adams, Transactions of the Newbury District Field Club, i. 178, 197.
page 313 note * Archaeologia, xxxvii. 364, fig. 8.
page 314 note * C. Warne, The Celtic Tumuli of Dorset, 42, 54, 58, ii. 28, and plate.
page 314 note † Journal of the British Archæological Association, xxvii. 449.
page 314 note ‡ Journal of the British Archæological Association, xlv. 112.