suggested explanations of his dismemberment, [97];

sometimes explained by the ancients as a personification of the corn, [107];

as a tree-spirit, [107] sqq.;

his image made out of a pine-tree, [108];

his emblems the crook and scourge or flail, [108], [153], compare 20;

his backbone represented by the ded pillar, [108] sq.;

interpreted as a cedar-tree god, [109] n. 1;

his soul in a bird, [110];

represented as a mummy enclosed in a tree, [110], [111];

obscene images of, [112];