[200.1] i. Blätt. f. Pomm. Volksk., 17. Other instances are cited there. Among the peasantry of the Riviera, thorns or nettles growing on a grave are a sign of the damnation of the dead; if other plants grow, he is happy; if a mixture, he is in purgatory. J. B. Andrews, in ix. Rev. Trad. Pop., 117.

[200.2] Featherman, Tur., 269; i. Macdonald, 229, citing Krapf.

[200.3] Hunter, Rural Bengal, 210.

[200.4] ix. Rev. Trad. Pop., 75, quoting Argensola, Histoire de la Conquête des Isles Moluques (Amsterdam, 1706).

[201.1] Modigliani, 618.

[201.2] Grimm, Teut. Myth., 1811.

[201.3] viii. Rev. Trad. Pop., 279.

[202.1] Dorman, 293, citing Smith’s Brazil; Von den Steinen, 369.

[202.2] Callaway, in iv. Journ. Anthr. Soc., cxxxviii.

[203.1] Grant Allen, Attis, 33, and passim. See also Frazer, Golden Bough, passim; Bötticher, 254 seqq.