[{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 Mystères, Ses Ruines, et son Musée, 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. xiv.).