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s Carystius. See, too, Gemoll, _Die Homerischen Hymnen_, p. 105. {13} _Journal of Hellenic Society_, vol. xiv. pp. 1-29. Mr. Verrall's whole paper ought to be read, as a summary cannot be adequate. {16a} Henderson, "The Casket Letters," p. 67. {16b} Baumeister, "Hymni Homerici," 1860, p. 108 _et seq_. {18} _Die Homerischen Hymnen_, p. 116 (1886). {23a} _Journal Anthrop. Inst_., Feb. 1892, p. 290. {23b} (_Op. cit_., p. 296.) See "Are Savage Gods Borrowed from Missionaries?" (_Nineteenth Century_, January 1899). {24} Hartland, "Folk-Lore," ix. 4, 312; x. I, p. 51. {30} Winslow, 1622. {34} For authorities, see Mr Howitt in the _Journal of the Anthropological Institute_, and my "Making of Religion." Also _Folk Lore_, December-March, 1898-99. {37a} Manning, "Notes on the Aborigines of New Holland." Read before Royal Society of New South Wales, 1882. Notes taken down in 1845. Compare Mrs. Langloh Parker, _More Australian Legendary Tales_, "The Legend of the Flowers." {37b} Spencer and Gillen, "Natives of Central Australia," p. 651, _s.v_. {39} For the use of Hermes's tortoise-shell as a musical instrument _without strings_, in early Anahuac, see Prof. Morse, in Appleton's _Popular Science Monthly_, March 1899. {41} Gemoll. {44} "Golden Bough," i. 279. Mannhardt, _Antike-Wald-und Feldkulte_, p. 274. {45} Howitt, _Journal Anthtop. Inst_., xvi. p. 54. {46a} The Kurnai hold this belief. {46b} Brough Smyth, vol. i. p. 426 {46c} _Journal Anthrop. Inst_., xvi. pp. 330-331. {59} The most minute study of Lobeck's _Aglaophamus_ can tell us no more than this; the curious may consult a useful short manual, _Eleusis, Ses Mysteres, Ses Ruines, et son Musee_, by M. Demetrios Philios. Athens, 1896. M. Philios is the Director of the Eleusinian Excavations. {61} "Golden Bough," ii. 292. {62} "Golden Bough," ii. 369. {64a} "Golden Bough," ii. 44. {64b} Ibid., 46. {65} Mrs. Langloh Parker, "More Australian Legends," pp. 93-99. {66} The anthropomorphic view of the Genius of the grain as a woman existed in Peru, as I have remarked in "Myth, Ritual, and Religion," i. 213. See, too, "Golden Bough," i. p. 351; Mr. Frazer also notes the Corn Mother of Germany, and the Harvest Maiden of Balquhidder. {67} "Golden Bough," p. 351, citing from Mannhardt a Spanish tract of 1649. {68} Howitt, on Mysteries of the Coast Murring (_Journal Anthrop. Instit_., vol.
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