[332.1] i. Journ. Anthr. Inst., 183.
[332.2] i. Gray, 295.
[332.3] Rev. S. Ella, in iv. Rep. Aust. Ass., 641.
CHAPTER XIV NOTES
[335.1] Dalton, 160, 216, 252, 273, 317, 321; Risley, passim.
[335.2] Hunter, Rur. Bengal, 188. No one reading the Indian evidence can be left in any uncertainty as to the meaning of the red lead. See Crooke, 197, 294; N. Ind. N. and Q., passim.
[336.1] i. Risley, 243; ii. 96, 222, 263. Cf. i. N. Ind. N. and Q., 152.
[336.2] i. Doolittle, 67-105; i. Gray, 193-209.
[336.3] Th. Volkov, in iii. L’Anthropologie, 541, 544, 545. A red cloth hung on a girl’s tent constitutes an offer of marriage among the Transylvanian Gipsies. Von Wlislocki, Volksdicht., 351.
[336.4] Dalton, 220; i. Risley, 138.