[[369]] Satapatha Brahmana, translated by Professor Eggeling, part iv, 1897, p. 371. (Sacred Books of the East.)

[[370]] Egyptian Myth and Legend, pp. 165 et seq.

[[371]] Classic Myth and Legend, p. 105. The birds were called "Stymphalides".

[[372]] The so-called "shuttle" of Neith may be a thunderbolt. Scotland's archaic thunder deity is a goddess. The bow and arrows suggest a lightning goddess who was a deity of war because she was a deity of fertility.

[[373]] Vedic Index, Macdonell & Keith, vol. ii, pp. 125-6, and vol. i, 168-9.

[[374]] Ezekiel, xxxi, 3-8.

[[375]] Ezekiel, xxvii, 23, 24.

[[376]] Isaiah, xxxvii, 11.

[[377]] Ibid., x, 5, 6.

[[378]] A winged human figure, carrying in one hand a basket and in another a fir cone.