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[288-3] _Relation de Cueba_, p. 140. Ed. Ternaux-Compans.
[290-1] La Vega, _Hist. des Incas_, liv. v. cap. 12.
[291-1] Morse, _Rep. on the Ind. Tribes_, App. p. 345.
[291-2] Ximenes, _Origen de los Indios de Guatemala_, p. 192; Acosta, _Hist. of the New World_, lib. v. chap. 18.
[291-3] Joseph de Maistre, _Eclairciss.e.m.e.nt sur les Sacrifices_; Trench, _Hulsean Lectures_, p. 180. The famed Abbe Lammenaais and Professor Sepp, of Munich, with these two writers, may be taken as the chief exponents of a school of mythologists, all of whom start from the theories first laid down by Count de Maistre in his _Soirees de St. Petersbourg_. To them the strongest proof of Christianity lies in the traditions and observances of heathendom. For these show the wants of the religious sense, and Christianity, they maintain, purifies and satisfies them all. The rites, symbols, and legends of every natural religion, they say, are true and not false; all that is required is to a.s.sign them their proper places and their real meaning. Therefore the strange resemblances in heathen myths to what is revealed in the Scriptures, as well as the ethical antic.i.p.ations which have been found in ancient philosophies, all, so far from proving that Christianity is a natural product of the human mind, in fact, are confirmations of it, unconscious prophecies, and presentiments of the truth.
[292-1] Alfred Maury, _La Magie et l'Astrologie dans l'Antiquite et au Moyen Age_, p. 8: Paris, 1860.
[292-2] Waitz, _Anthropologie_, i. pp. 325, 465.
[293-1] So says Dr. Waitz, _ibid._, p. 465.
[294-1] Schoolcraft, _Algic Researches_, i. p. 143.
[294-2] _L'Homme Americain_, ii. p. 319.
[295-1] Bra.s.seur, _Hist. du Mexique_, liv. iii. chaps. 1 and 2.
[295-2] Sahagun, _Hist. de la Nueva Espana_, lib. x. cap. 29.
[296-1] Novalis, _Schriften_, i. p. 244: Berlin, 1837.
[296-2] Ibid., p. 267.
[296-3] _Hist. de la Civilisation en France_, i. pp. 122, 130.
[297-1] _Narrative of J. R. Jewett among the Savages of Nootka Sound_, p.
121.
[297-2] _Rel. de la Nouv. France_, An 1636, p. 109.
[297-3] Ibid., An 1670, p. 99.
[299-1] Geronimo de Ore, _Symbolo Catholico Indiano_, chap, ix., quoted by Ternaux-Compans. De Ore was a native of Peru and held the position of Professor of Theology in Cuzco in the latter half of the sixteenth century. He was a man of great erudition, and there need be no hesitation in accepting this extraordinary prayer as genuine. For his life and writings see Nic. Antonio, _Bib. Hisp. Nova_, tom. ii. p. 43.
[300-1] Sahagun, _Hist. de la Nueva Espana_, lib. vi. caps. 1, 4.
[300-2] Morse, _Rep. on the Ind. Tribes_, App. p. 250.
[302-1] Cogolludo, _Hist. de Yucathan_, lib. iv. cap. 9. Compare Stephens, _Travs. in Yucatan_, ii. p. 122, who describes the remains of these roads as they now exist.
[302-2] Rivero and Tschudi, _Antiqs. of Peru_, p. 162.
[302-3] La Vega, _Hist. des Incas_, lib. vi. chap. 30; Xeres, _Rel de la Conq. du Perou_, p. 151; _Let. sur les Superst.i.t. du Perou_, p. 98, and others.