[93] Compare, besides Wundt and H. Spencer and the instructive article in the Encyclopedia Britannica, 1911 (Animism, Mythology, and so forth).
[94] l.c., p. 154.
[95] See Tylor, Primitive Culture, Vol. I, p. 477.
[96] Cultes, Mythes et Religions, T. II: Introduction, p. XV, 1909.
[97] Année Sociologique, Seventh Vol, 1904.
[98] To frighten away a ghost with noise and cries is a form of pure sorcery; to force him to do something by taking his name is to employ magic against him.
[99] The Magic Art, II. p. 67.
[100] The Biblical prohibition against making an image of anything living hardly sprang from any fundamental rejection of plastic art, but was probably meant to deprive magic, which the Hebraic religion proscribed, of one of its instruments. Frazer, l.c., p. 87, note.
[101] The Magic Art, II, p. 98.
[102] An echo of this is to be found in the Oedipus Rex of Sophocles.