[207] A. P. Reid.
[208] Nicolo di Coti.
[209] J. E. Price.
[210] H. M. Westropp.
[211] The artist, Mr. J. E. Newton, an exhibitor at the Royal Academy of 1874. I have engraved a few of his designs.
[212] The above remarks do not refer to those monster urns in which the whole body was entombed unburnt. Some of these measure six feet in length and four and a half feet in width. One found at Dardanus was able to accommodate six persons. See the 'Illustrated London News' of April 26, 1856.
[213] My friend Mr. Clarke has very kindly sketched, in elucidation of this view, the vessels shown in the family mausoleum sketched in Plate V.
[214] Numbers of these relics were dug up at both places, in 1855 and 1856, by Mr. Spencer Wells, Dr. Kirk, Mr. Calvert, Mr. Brunton, myself, and others.
[215] The church of St. Ursula; the bones are said to be those of the Eleven Thousand Virgins.
[216] This is urged by Mr. Baker, the author of the 'Laws relating to Burial,' in a letter addressed to me.
Minor typographical and punctuation errors have been corrected without note. Irregularities and inconsistencies in the text have been retained as printed.
Plate VI "E. F. C. Prentos" is unclear.