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