New folklore researchesGreek folk poesy: . Cretans Refuges —became the general namefor grottoes supposed to be places of security. SeePashley {loc. cit., pp. 128, 129), who thus quotes fromPhotius {Lex, p. 178): Kprjaipvyera to, Trpo? rom )(6iixoiva(;oTepva Kal uxvpco/xaTU oi §e (paalv on KprfTCi e^v<yov els(TTT^Xaia Tivd oGev eKelva wvo/xdadrjaav Kprjaipvyera. CONCLUSION, He feels from Judas hind V The dreaded Infants Jiand, The rays cf Bethlehem blind his dusky cyu ;Nor all the Cods besideLonger dare abide. Nor TypJion huge ending in snaky twine ;Oiir Babe, to show His Godhead in


New folklore researchesGreek folk poesy: . Cretans Refuges —became the general namefor grottoes supposed to be places of security. SeePashley {loc. cit., pp. 128, 129), who thus quotes fromPhotius {Lex, p. 178): Kprjaipvyera to, Trpo? rom )(6iixoiva(;oTepva Kal uxvpco/xaTU oi §e (paalv on KprfTCi e^v<yov els(TTT^Xaia Tivd oGev eKelva wvo/xdadrjaav Kprjaipvyera. CONCLUSION, He feels from Judas hind V The dreaded Infants Jiand, The rays cf Bethlehem blind his dusky cyu ;Nor all the Cods besideLonger dare abide. Nor TypJion huge ending in snaky twine ;Oiir Babe, to show His Godhead in the swaddling bands control the damned crew. Milton : Ode on the Nativity. Of the other class [of superstitions], namely those which havethis \religious] element, there are great inindiers in various parts ofthe world; as, for instance, the veneration paid and the offeringsmade to fairies; these being in fact the very gods that wereworshipped by our heatiien ancesto7-s.^—Whatelv : Supeistition. THE SURVIVAL OF PAGANISM. VOL. II. 30. THE SURVIVAL OF PACxANISM. PREAMBLE. THE HISTORICAL AIM OF THE INVESTIGATION. In Plutarchs Dialogue On the Cessation of Oracles,iKleombrotos, the Lacedaemonian, who had been tra-velling in Egypt and the Soudan,!^ and who had met,among others, at Delphi, the Grammarian, Demetriosof Tarsus, who had been travelling in Britain, at theopposite end of the Roman world<;—this Kleombrotosinforms the company that ^-Emilian, the Rhetorician,had told him a wonderful story touching the mortalityof Dsemons. On a voyage made by his father, Epi-therses, to Italy, when they were still not far from theEchinades Islands, the wind fell, and they were driftingin the evening towards the Islands of Paxi. Then,suddenly, as the passengers were drinking after supper,a voice was heard from one of the islands, calling on acertain Thamusi so loudly as to fill all with Thamus was an Egyptian pilot, known by nameto but few on board. Twice the voice calle


Size: 3080px × 811px
Photo credit: © The Reading Room / Alamy / Afripics
License: Licensed
Model Released: No

Keywords: ., bookcentury1800, bookdecade1890, bookpublisheretcetc, bookyear189