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Published online by Cambridge University Press: 27 October 2009
page 467 note 1 I may add that Mr. Skeat has a remarkable account, from the lips of a Malay, of the various stages in substitution for a human victim.
page 467 note 2 Miss Harrison's translation of the account of these, from a scholiast on Lucian (p. 122 note); appears, if correctly printed, to mistake the meaning of (). It runs: ‘When they replace the remains by those well-known images ().’
page 469 note 1 It may be worth mentioning that the practice of cleaning with mud, which Miss Harrison finds unnatural (p. 493), may be seen any day in India. The people cleanse their bronze bowls in that way, and often also their feet and legs.