101
See Index-Naishidokoro.
102
A kind of hawk. 'Odyssey,' xv. 525.
103
Vide 'The Hinomaru' in the T. A. S. J., vol. xxii. p. 27.
104
See above, p. 65. (#pgepubid00011)
105
'In the Shinto Pantheon,' in the New World, December, 1896.
106
Japan is annually visited by destructive typhoons, accompanied by great darkness and a terrific downpour of rain.
107
See above, p. 106. (#Page_106)
108
Egyptian is one.
109
See Index (#Page_288)-'Sasura-hime.'
110
'Religions of Primitive Peoples,' p. 80.
111
I offer, for consideration only, two conjectures: first, that Tsuki-yomi was the Ise Moon-God, and Susa no wo the Idzumo lunar deity; and second, that Susa may possibly be an allotropic form of sasura, banish.
112
"The large, deep love of living sea and land." – Swinburne, 'Kynance Cove.'
113
Graphically described in Lafcadio Hearn's 'Glimpses of Unfamiliar Japan.'
114
See above, p. 108. (#Page_108)
115
See above, p. 106. (#Page_106)
116
Nihongi, ii. 366.
117
I. 198.
118
See 'Ch. K.,' p. 33.
119
See above, p. 95. (#Page_95)
120
See Index-'Sumiyoshi.'
121
See p. 114. (#Page_114)
122
See above, p. 92. (#Page_92)
123
Nihongi, i. 22.
124
See Index-'Wind-Gods.'
125
In Yucatan there were four Wind-Gods, who upheld the four corners of Heaven.