[171] In old Gaelic the liver is the seat of life.

[172] Mrs. E. Tawse Jollie, Hervetia, S. Melsetter, S. Rhodesia, writes me under October 12, 1918, in answer to my query, that the Boers regard striep muis (striped mice) as a cure for "weakness of the bowel" in children, &c.

[173] In a Roman representation of her at Birrens, in Perthshire, she is shown as a winged figure holding a spear in her right hand and a globe in her left. An altar in Chester is dedicated to "De Nymphæ Brig". Her name is enshrined in Bregentz (anciently Brigantium), a town in Switzerland.

[174] The beithis lay hidden in arms of the sea and came ashore to devour animals.

[175] The Dragon in China and Japan (1913).

[176] Trevelyan. Folk-lore and Folk-stories of Wales, p. 165.

[177] W. R. S. Ralston, Songs of the Russian People, pp. 117 et seq.

[178] Journal of the Anthropological Institute, XXVI (1897). p. 23.

[179] Laufer, Jade, p. 310.

[180] My Schools and Schoolmasters, Chapter VI.