Custom and Myth - LightNovelsOnl.com
You're reading novel online at LightNovelsOnl.com. Please use the follow button to get notifications about your favorite novels and its latest chapters so you can come back anytime and won't miss anything.
{259} Kamilaroi and Kurnai. Natives call these objects their kin, 'of one flesh' with them.
{260} Studies, p. 11.
{265a} O'Curry, Manners of Ancient Irish, l. ccclxx., quoting Trin. Coll. Dublin MS.
{265b} See also Elton's Origins of English History, pp. 299-301.
{265c} Kemble's Saxons in England, p. 258. Politics of Aristotle, Bolland and Lang, p. 99. {265d}
{265d} Mr. Grant Allen kindly supplied me some time ago with a list of animal and vegetable names preserved in the t.i.tles of ancient English village settlements. Among them are: ash, birch, bear (as among the Iroquois), oak, buck, fir, fern, sun, wolf, thorn, goat, horse, salmon (the trout is a totem in America), swan (familiar in Australia), and others.
{267} 'Gentiles sunt qui inter se eodem nomine sunt. Qui ab ingeniis oriundi sunt. Quorum majorum nemo servitutem servivit. Qui capite non sunt deminuti.'
{268} Studies in Ancient History, p. 212.
{270} Fortnightly Review, October 1869: 'Archaeologia Americana,' ii. 113.
{273a} Suidas, 3102.
{273b} Herod., i. 173.
{273c} Cf. Bachofen, p. 309.
{273d} Compare the Irish Nennius, p. 127.
{276} The ill.u.s.trations in this article are for the most part copied, by permission of Messrs. Ca.s.sell & Co., from the Magazine of Art, in which the essay appeared.
{286} Part of the pattern (Fig. 5, b) recurs on the New Zealand Bull-roarer, engraved in the essay on the Bull-roarer.
{289} See Schliemann's Troja, wherein is much learning and fancy about the Aryan Svastika.