divination by means of, ii. 345;

sacred, in Scotland, x. 12;

menstruous women kept from x. 81, 96 sq.;

charred sticks of Midsummer fires thrown into, x. 184;

crowned with flowers at Midsummer, xi. 28

——, goddess of, married to a wooden image of a god, ii. 146

——, holy, resorted to on Midsummer Eve in Ireland, x. 205 sq.

——, the Lord of the, at Fulda on Midsummer Day, xi. 28

Welsh, Miss, on the custom of the churn in the north of Ireland, vii. 155 n. 1