[112] Op. cit. pp. 154 f.; cp. Warde Fowler, ERE, X. 820 a; Marquardt, Das Privatleben der Römer, p. 118 (1886); Dill, Roman Society in the last century of the Roman Empire, pp. 76 ff. (1910).

[113] Op. cit. I. 360.

[114] Cp. Marquardt, Das Privatleben der Römer, p. 118, and the reff. there given (1886).

[115] GB, The Scapegoat, p. 65 (1913), from Liv. vii. 1-3.

[116] In de la Saussaye, Lehrbuch der Religionsgeschichte, II. 33, cp. 149 (1905), and Reinach, Orpheus, p. 89. A great deal of information will be found scattered about in various volumes of the Sacred Books of the East series, e.g. I, XV (Upanishads); XII, XXVI, XLI, XLIII, XLIV (Satapatha-Brâhmana); XXXIV, XXXVIII, XLVIII (the Vedânta-Sûtras); XLIX (Buddhist Mahâyâna Texts); XXIII, XXXI (the Zend-Avesta); XXVII, XXVIII, XL (the Sacred Books of China). Also the relevant articles, which are many, in ERE, where special literature in abundance will be found.

[117] Schoolcraft, The Indian Tribes of the United States, I. 191 (ed. by F. S. Drake, 1891); there is an illustration given of this dance.

[118] Unknown Mexico, I. 330 f. (1903).

[119] For the religious dance among the ancient Peruvians see Réville, Hibbert Lectures, pp. 224 ff. (1895); J. G. Müller, Amerikanische Urreligion, p. 385 (1867); Reinach, Orpheus, p. 230 (1909).

[120] Hahl, Mittheilungen über Sitten und rechtliche Verhältnisse auf Ponape, in “Ethnologisches Notizblatt,” II. ii. 1 (1901), quoted by Frazer, Folk-lore in the Old Testament, I. 40 (1918). The Maoris attributed the origin of dancing to two goddesses, Raukata-uri and Raukata-mea, J. Macmillan Brown, Maori and Polynesian, p. 208 (1907); see also the interesting illustrations in Caillot, Les Polynésiens orientaux..., Pls. XLVII, XLIX-LII (1909).

[121] Les religions des peuples non-civilisés, pp. 251 f. (1883).