[414]. In a Bakairi myth a woman appears, who has sprung from a corn mortar. In a Zulu myth it is said: A woman is to catch a drop of blood in a vessel, then close the vessel, put it aside for eight months and open it in the ninth month. She follows the advice, opens the vessel in the ninth month, and finds a child in it. (Frobenius: “Das Zeitalter des Sonnengottes” [The Age of the Sun-God], I, p. 237.)
[415]. Inman: Ibid., p. 10, Plate IX.
[416]. Roscher: “Lexicon,” Sp. 2733/4. See section, Men.
[417]. A well-known sun animal, frequent as a phallic symbol.
[418]. Like Mithra and the Dadophores.
[419]. The castration in the service of the mother explains this quotation in a very significant manner: Exod. iv: 25: “Then Zipporah took a sharp stone, and cut off her son’s foreskin and cast it at his feet and said, Surely, a bloody husband art thou to me.” This passage shows what circumcision means.
[420]. Gilgamesh, Dionysus, Hercules, Christ, Mithra, and so on.
[421]. Compare with this, Graf: “R. Wagner im Fliegenden Holländer: Schriften zur angewandten Seelenkunde.”
[422]. I have pointed out above, in reference to the Zosimos vision, that the altar meant the uterus, corresponding to the baptismal font.