Shui. Water; and deliverance from evil, [125][126]

Shui Kuan. Ruler of the Watery Elements, [216]

Shui-mu Niang-niang. Old Mother of the Waters; legend of, [220] sq.; and Sun Hou-tzŭ, [221][222]; and Kuan Yin, [221][222]

Shun. Successor of the great Emperor Yao; with Yao and Yü as the Three Origins, [126][127]

Shun-fêng Êrh, or Kao Chio. Favourable-wind Ear, [161] sq.; general of tyrant Chou, [161][162]; encounters with No-cha, Yang Chien, Chiang Tzŭ-ya, Li Ching, and Lei Chên-tzŭ, [162] sq.; defeat of, [163][164]; searches for heir to Miao Chuang, [254][255]

Silkworms, Goddess of, [169]

Sin. By the gods, [99]

Sinkiang. The New Territory, or Eastern Turkestan; a dependency of China, [27]

Six-toed People, [389] Page 448

Slavery. Unknown in early times, recognized in Monarchical Period, [48]