404 Appendix 



Page 



Bees bred from hornets and sun — Colu7neUa : Of Hus- 

 bandry ... . . . . 267 



"An olive tree" — Homer: Odys., xiii. 123. Bryant's 

 trans. . 26S 



" The priestesses of Ceres " — Porphyry : On the Cave 

 of the Nymphs 5.68 



" Above all, venerate " — Virg. : Geor.,\ 269 



Sacrifices to Ceres. Athenasus tells us — Heraclides the 

 Syracusan, in his treatise on Laws, says, that in Syra- 

 cuse on the principal day of the Thesmophorion festi- 

 val (held in honor of Ceres) cakes in the form of the 

 female pudendum are made of sesame and honey, and 

 are used throughout all Sicily, being carried about as 

 offerings to the goddess. This recalls certain mar- 

 riage observances of the ancient Hindus 269 



Ceres' priestess torn to pieces — Af easel : Myth. Forsch. 269 



" The Moon hkewise " — Porphyry : On the Cave of the 

 Nymphs . . .... 269 



" O blest son " — Pindar : Pyth., iv. . . . . 270 



Apollo's oldest temple — Pawsanias : The Descrip. of 

 Greece, bk. x. 5 . . . 270 



Apollo the god of the bees — Menzel : Myth. Forsch. . 270 



According to Hawk's Peruv. Antiq., p. 198, " Honey was 

 offered up to the sun by the ancient Peruvians." 



" Single out four choice bulls " — Vz'rg. : Gear., iv. 271 



" Some have alleged " — /did. . . . . ... 272 



Democritus promised resurrection — Gtibernatis Zoologi- 

 cal Mythology ; Menzel: Myth. Forsch 273 



Alexander buried in \\<:>-at.y — Menzel : Myth. Forsch. 



Monogr. d. B. . 274 



Whiston's Josephus — Rev. A. R. Shilleto, xiv. vii. 4 . 273 



" At once they mixed " — Apoll. Rhod.,hk. '-[-v. . . . 275 



" To Phrygia's steeps " — Eurip. : The Bacchce . . 276 



"The ivy wands " — Ibid. ... ... 276 



"And he set therein" — Iliad., xxiii. Lang, Leaf, and 



Myers .... ... 276 



