Commentary on books IX-X: Boeotia, Phocis. Addenda

Front Cover
Macmillan, 1898

From inside the book

Other editions - View all

Common terms and phrases

Popular passages

Page 522 - relating to it. For each town has a peculiar one, kept exceedingly secret, in addition to the general ju-jus, and this secret one would then be in the hands of the new owners of the spirit. It is for similar reasons that brave General MacCarthy's head was treasured by the Ashantees, and so on
Page 26 - Far, far from here, The Adriatic breaks in a warm bay Among the green Illyrian hills ; and there The sunshine in the happy glens is fair,
Page 358 - the lord of tigers, in the form of a shapeless stone smeared with red lead and clarified butter. They give him chickens and goats, break cocoa-nuts on his head, and pour oil on him ; and he preserves them from tigers, gives them good crops, and keeps disease from them
Page 225 - In the Pelew Islands there is a legend that the first men were made out of clay kneaded with the blood of various animals, and that the characters of these first men and of their descendants were determined by the characters of the animals whose blood had been kneaded with the primordial clay
Page 225 - (Eskimo) of Point Barrow, Alaska, tell of a time when there was no man in the land, till a spirit named ds? lu, who resided at Point Barrow, made a clay man, set him up on the shore to dry, breathed into him and gave him life
Page 491 - like a date-stone, telling him to put it into his mouth. No sooner had he tasted it than he became oblivious of hunger and thirst. After some time one of the players said,
Page 225 - The Kumis of south-eastern India say that God made the world and the trees and the creeping things first, and then set about making man. He made a clay man and a clay woman ; but at night, while God slept, a great snake came and ate
Page 296 - in London who wished to live for ever, so they say : London, London is a fine town. A maiden prayed to live for ever. And still she lives and hangs in a basket in a church, and every St. John's Day about noon she eats a roll of bread
Page 225 - According to a Melanesian legend, told in Mota, one of the Banks Islands, the hero Qat made men of clay, the red clay from the marshy river-side at Vanua Lava. At first he made men and pigs just alike, but his brothers remonstrated with him, so he beat down the pigs to go on all fours and made men walk upright. Qat

Bibliographic information