Page:Myth, Ritual, and Religion (Volume 2).djvu/383

From Wikisource
Jump to navigation Jump to search
This page has been proofread, but needs to be validated.
INDEX.
369
Ovaherero myths, i. 176
Ovakuru Meyuru, the, i. 177
Ovid, on Hecate, i. 279
Owl, legend of, i. 146
Owl, bat, and eagle-owl, legend of, i. 146
 
Pachacamac, i. 212
Pachyachachi, i. 210
Palenque, city of, ii. 38
Pakeha Maori, the, 1. 112
Panchæa, i. 15
Panquetzaliztli, ii. 74
Paracelsus, his theory on darkness, i. 127
Paraguay, metamorphosism, i. 118
Parkman, on the primitive Indian, ii. 39
Parnopios, statue of, ii. 201
Pastoral stage absent in America, ii. 40
Paul de St. Victor, on Apollo, ii. 193; on Hermes, ii. 259
Pausanias, on temple pictures, i. 2; on human sacrifices to Zeus, i. 268; on Artemis Orthia, ii. 215; on Dionysiac orgies, ii. 227; on Aphrodite, ii. 252; on Pentheus, ii. 235; on rites of Demeter, ii. 264; on the Eleusinia, ii. 271
Pelican, myth of, i. 141
Pentheus, slaying of, ii. 234
Perry, on Vedic texts upon origin of man, ii. 144; on Indra and Vrittra, ii. 147
Persephone, ii. 273
Peruvian mysteries, compared with Eleusinian, i. 283; myths, 205–213; tales, ii. 315; totemism, i. 75, 207
Phallus, ii. 255–256
Pietschmann, on Egyptian animal-worship, ii. 99
Pigs, origin of, i. 145; sacred to Demeter, ii. 261, 269
Pindar, on the gods as cannibals, i. 3; an apologist for myths, i. 4; on origin of man, i. 321
Pinkerton, on sorcery at Loango, i. 110
Pirnmeheal, ii. 6
Piute myths, i. 130, 313
Phaethon, ii. 193
Phallic Hermæ, the, ii. 255, 256, 257
Phanes, i. 317
Philemon, on myth of Niobe, i. 154
Philo Byblius, i. 322
Philology, i. 21–25
Philomela, i. 142
Phœnician cosmogonic myths, i. 322
Phœnix, ii. 252
Phoibos, meaning of, ii. 194
Plant-myths, i. 155, 156
Plastering with clay. See Clay
Platæa, story of, ii. 178
Plato, on religious rites, i. 265; on myths, i. 299
Platonists, the, on Dionysus Zagreus, ii. 225
Plutarch, on legend of Zeus and log of oak-wood, i. 18; on sacrifices, i. 280; on the cessation of oracles, i. 330; the god of, i. 330; on the Delphic responses, ii. 201; on Dionysus, ii. 234; on mysteries of Demeter, ii. 275
Polytheism in Egypt, ii. 89
Popul Vuh, hymns of, i. 199
Popular tales, ii. 283–320; Märchen, ii. 86; epic poetry and legend, ii. 286; difficulties of, ii. 317
Porphyry, an apologist for myths, i. 4; on Egyptian kinship with nature, i. 80; on sacred images, i. 265; on human sacrifices, i. 307
Pond, on Dacotah medicine-men, i. 111
Poseidon, disguised as a horse, i. 9
Po'shai-an-K'ia, ii. 63
Powell, on the Ute hero, ii. 55
Prajapati, i. 235, 248, 249, 252, ii. 132
Preller, on Cronus, i. 304, 308; on Zeus, ii. 175; on the Argive Apollo, ii. 200; on mouse-Apollo, ii. 201; on Apollo a shepherd,