Outlines of Primitive Belief Among the Indo-European RacesC. Scribner's Sons, 1882 - 534 pagina's |
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Pagina 10
... seen , or by the next thing which in form and vitality shows its likeness to the fox . Taking this for an example of the first word ever uttered , it must , one would say , be to a great extent an accident whether this first word comes ...
... seen , or by the next thing which in form and vitality shows its likeness to the fox . Taking this for an example of the first word ever uttered , it must , one would say , be to a great extent an accident whether this first word comes ...
Pagina 27
... seen ; and the myth of the Cyclops could only grow in natural wise , so long as men really believed that the stormy sky was a being and the sun his eye . When the Cyclops had be- come a mere one - eyed giant , then all new tales told of ...
... seen ; and the myth of the Cyclops could only grow in natural wise , so long as men really believed that the stormy sky was a being and the sun his eye . When the Cyclops had be- come a mere one - eyed giant , then all new tales told of ...
Pagina 35
... seen Being when he prays to his gri - gri to save him from the storm . Had he no such notion he would pray to the winds and waves themselves not to drown him . De Brosses ' fetiches are of the late or magical kind . Anything , according ...
... seen Being when he prays to his gri - gri to save him from the storm . Had he no such notion he would pray to the winds and waves themselves not to drown him . De Brosses ' fetiches are of the late or magical kind . Anything , according ...
Pagina 46
... seen how , while the nature worship remained , the creed was purely polytheistic ; how , as the sea could have no control over the sky , nor the sky over the earth , the gods who represented these things must remain apart . But in time ...
... seen how , while the nature worship remained , the creed was purely polytheistic ; how , as the sea could have no control over the sky , nor the sky over the earth , the gods who represented these things must remain apart . But in time ...
Pagina 47
... seen how it grows to be a generic This last consummation cannot be far off . When a phenomenon , a thing , is changed into a person , and bap- tised with an appellation of its own , the tendency will arise to call other phenomena of ...
... seen how it grows to be a generic This last consummation cannot be far off . When a phenomenon , a thing , is changed into a person , and bap- tised with an appellation of its own , the tendency will arise to call other phenomena of ...
Overige edities - Alles bekijken
Outlines of Primitive Belief Among the Indo-European Races Charles Francis Keary Volledige weergave - 1882 |
Outlines of Primitive Belief Among the Indo-European Races Charles Francis Keary Volledige weergave - 1882 |
Outlines of Primitive Belief Among the Indo-European Races Charles Francis Keary Volledige weergave - 1882 |
Veelvoorkomende woorden en zinsdelen
abstract Æsir Agni ancient Apollo Aryaman Aryan Aryas Ask and Embla Asvin Athênê belongs called chapter character clouds creed dawn dead death Dêmêtêr Dionysus divinity Dyâus earth goddess Edda Eleusinia Eleusis emotion example express fetich fire gods Greece Greek Hadês heaven henotheism Hêra Heracles Hermês hero history of belief holy Homer human hymns idea imagination Indian Indo-European Indra instinct Jörmungandr kind Kronos land language magic Maruts Max Müller meaning mind Mitra and Varuna moral morning mountain mysteries myth mythic mythology nations nature worship never Odhinn Odysseus once origin Persephonê phase of belief phenomena physical primitive Prithivi race religion religious Rig Veda rites river root sacred Sanskrit Savitar sense serpent soul storm story stream suppose Teutonic things Thorr thou thought tree Varuna Vedas Vedic Völuspá Vritra wanderings Wherefore wind word Yggdrasill Zeus
Populaire passages
Pagina 123 - You wait on nature's mischief! Come, thick night, And pall thee in the dunnest smoke of hell, That my keen knife see not the wound it makes, Nor heaven peep through the blanket of the dark, To cry 'Hold, hold!