[7] As we might suppose in reading Hesiod, Th., 195ff, and Plato, Crat., 406 c.
[8] Taylor mentions this Maori legend in his New Zealand, 119. Cf. Andrew Lang, Myth, Ritual and Religion, I, 302, and Roscher, Lex., s. v. “Kronos,” col. 1542.
[9] H. Steinthal, “Die Sage von Prometheus,” in Zeitschrift für Völkerpsychologie und Sprachwissenschaft, II, ii, 8-9.
[10] Διὸς κούρη.
[11] As reported in Roscher’s Lexikon, s. v. “Aphrodite.”
[12] Preller, Griechische Mythologie, I, p. 364.
[13] The original is written in a Sumerian dialect with a translation into the Semitic Babylonian. See Records of the Past, New Series, Vol. I, p. 85.
[14] Literally, “I do not take counsel, myself I am not wise.”
[15] Records of the Past, Vol. VII, p. 67.
[16] II, Pl. XLVIII, p. 697.