Footnote 766:[(return)]
Avienus, Ora Maritima, 644 f.
Footnote 767:[(return)]
IT i. 25; Gaidoz, ZCP i. 27.
Footnote 768:[(return)]
Annales de Bretagne, x. 414.
Footnote 769:[(return)]
IT i. 50, cf. 184; Folk-Lore, vi. 170.
Footnote 770:[(return)]
Cæsar, vi. 18.
Footnote 771:[(return)]
See p. [341], infra.
Footnote 772:[(return)]
Diod. Sic. v. 24; Appian, Illyrica, 2.
Footnote 773:[(return)]
Amm. Marcel, xv. 9.
Footnote 774:[(return)]
D'Arbois, ii. 262, xii. 220.
Footnote 775:[(return)]
Antient Laws of Ireland, i. 23. In one MS. Adam is said to have been created thus—his body of earth, his blood of the sea, his face of the sun, his breath of the wind, etc. This is also found in a Frisian tale (Vigfusson-Powell, Corpus Poet. Bor. i. 479), and both stories present an inversion of well-known myths about the creation of the universe from the members of a giant.