[47] “Journal Asiatic Society, Bengal,” lix. 212. The horror with which the Homeric Greeks regarded the eating of a corpse by dogs comes out very strongly in the Iliad.

[48] “Indian Antiquary,” v. 358 sq.

[49] “Original Inhabitants,” 157 sq.

[50] “Archæological Reports,” xxiii. 26.

[51] “North Indian Notes and Queries,” i. 118.

[52] Campbell, “Notes,” 276 sq.

[53] Wright, “History,” 39 sq.

[54] Hislop, “Papers,” 6.

[55] “Folk-lore,” iii. 127; “Panjâb Notes and Queries,” iii. 94, 148; iv. 46, 150, 173; “North Indian Notes and Queries,” iii. 18, 67; Knowles, “Folk-tales of Kashmîr,” 36, 429; Clouston, “Popular Tales,” ii. 166; Tawney, “Katha Sarit Sâgara,” ii. 90; “Gesta Romanorum,” Introd. xlii.

[56] Conway, “Demonology,” i. 134; Gregor, “Folk-lore of North-East Scotland,” 126 sq.