103. Jones (1953, pp. 334-335).
    104. Origins (pp. 251-252).
    105. Zilboorg (1962, p. 167).
    106. Origins (p. 276).
    107. S. Freud (1900, S.E., 4, p. 205).
    108. Jones (1955, p. 38).
    109. Jones (1955, p. 95).
    110. Jones (1955, p. 95).
    111. Letters (pp. 261, 267); Jones (1955, p. 19); Letters (p. 266).
    112. Letters (p. 293).
    113. Freud wrote in a letter, for example: “[M]y relationship to this work [Moses] is something like that to a love child. Every day for three lonely weeks in September 1913 [actually, September 1912] 1 stood in the church in front of the statue, studying it…One of the consequences of my failing health difficult to bear is that I can no longer come to Rome…” (Letters, p. 416). Elsewhere, Freud wrote, “How often have I mounted the steep steps of the unlovely Corso Cavour to the lonely piazza where the deserted church stands, and have assayed to support the angry scorn of the hero’s glance”; see S. Freud (1914a, S.E., 13, p. 213).
    114. Letters (p. 302).
    115. Jones (1955, p. 37).
    116. Bowlby (1980, p. 85).
    117. Jones (1953, p. 330).
    118. Jones (1955, p. 17).
    119. Velikovsky (1941, p. 490).
    120. Velikovsky (1941, p. 490).
    121. Banks & Mitchell (1980, pp. 505-531).
    122. Banks & Mitchell (1980, pp. 505-531).
    123. S. Freud, quoted by Velikovsky (1941, p. 490). A “herbarium” is a collection of dried plant specimens, usually mounted and systematically arranged for reference.
    124. Velikovsky (1941, p. 490-491).
    125. Velikovsky (1941, p. 492).
    126. Velikovsky (1941, note 4).
    127. Velikovsky (1941, p. 492-493).
    128. Velikovsky (1941, p. 493).
    129. Velikovsky (1941, p. 493-494).
    130. Velikovsky (1941, p. 494).
    131. S. Freud (1900, S.E., 4, p. 194).
    132. S. Freud (1900, S.E., 4, p. 194).
    133. Strachey (Ed.), in S. Freud (1900, S.E., 4, p. 195, note 1).
    134. For clear interpretation of Karlsbad as a nanny symbol, see Grigg (1973); not surprisingly, Karlsbad was also strongly linked by Freud to Rome (e.g., S. Freud (1985, pp. 373, 378, 387).
    135. S. Freud (1900, S.E., 4, p. 196).
    136. Strachey (Ed.), in S. Freud (1900, S.E., 4, p. 196, note).
    137. See Leppmann (1970) for biographical material on Winckelmann.


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