The Golden Bough by Sir James George Frazer
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page 13 of 1249 (01%)
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Compare A. H. Sayce, in _Journal of the Royal Asiatic Society,_ July
1921, pp. 440-442. [4] _The Golden Bough,_ Part VI. _The Scapegoat,_ pp. 354 _sqq.,_ 412 _sqq._ [5] P. Amaury Talbot in _Journal of the African Society,_ July 1916, pp. 309 _sq.; id.,_ in _Folk-lore, xxvi._ (1916), pp. 79 _sq.;_ H. R. Palmer, in _Journal of the African Society,_ July 1912, pp. 403, 407 _sq._ With these and other instances of like customs before us it is no longer possible to regard the rule of succession to the priesthood of Diana at Aricia as exceptional; it clearly exemplifies a widespread institution, of which the most numerous and the most similar cases have thus far been found in Africa. How far the facts point to an early influence of Africa on Italy, or even to the existence of an African population in Southern Europe, I do not presume to say. The pre-historic historic relations between the two continents are still obscure and still under investigation. Whether the explanation which I have offered of the institution is correct or not must be left to the future to determine. I shall always be ready to abandon it if a better can be suggested. Meantime in committing the book in its new form to the judgment of the public I desire to guard against a misapprehension of its scope which appears to be still rife, though I have sought to correct it before now. If in the present work I have dwelt at some length on the worship of trees, it is not, I trust, because I exaggerate its importance in the history of religion, still less because I would |
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