Compraehensive Correlative Mutual Alignments of Sequential Events in Major Mythologic Systems Worldwide, part 14
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MYTHIC EVENTS : MUSKHOGEE SEQUENCE; ZUN~I SEQUENCE; UPPER CHEHALIS SEQUENCE |
HELLENIC STANDARD SEQUENCE (Apollodoros) OF MYTHIC EVENTS [forwards sequence] |
CHINESE STANDARD SEQUENCE (Mountains and Seas Classic) OF MYTHIC LOCALITIES [backwards sequence] |
BORNEO SHAMANRY; MUSKHOGEAN MYTHOLOGY; BHARATIYA SEQUENCE (Maha-bharata & Puran.a) |
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"the turkey as the “Blue Long-tailed King of the Birds” that came every day and ate the Muskogee people during their eastward migration" (CM&LCI, p. 33). |
"dreamed that ..., snatched his sceptre {cf. "scepter dating between 1230 and 1050 BC (LC III) ... topped with two birds of prey" (C-ABI, p. 66)} ..., which overshadowed the entire land" (GM @113.n). |
"There is a bird ... which ... has ... six tails, and it is good at ... mocking" (CM&S, p. 26 2:3:22). {Dreams are said to be "mocking" our waking-experience.} |
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"the serpent-haired, |
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"Flying fox braided fur cord used as currency in the Loyalty Islands" (W"Pteropus -- In Culture"). |
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dog-headed, bat-winged [Erinues] appeared" (GM @114.a). {the most nearly canine-headed of bats are the so-called "flying foxes"} They kept a continuous watch over [W]orestes. |
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Bidayuh : "like the flying fox flying ..., ... let ... the sickness fly" (HTS, p. 282). |
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"[Elektra] ... was now nursing the afflicted [Worestes]" (GM @114.c). [\elektron\ 'amber (a tree-resin)'] |
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Penan : "Bale Marau, spirit of the rainbow, ... Make a wall of resin" (HTS, p. 289 8.1). |
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"should be stoned" (GM @114.d). [when struck, stones may make a combination of sounds] |
"the bawler ... makes a noise like all the sounds put together." (CM&S, p. 26 2:3:22) |
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"they should first punish ... cowardice" (GM @114.e). |
"the River Brave runs on" (CM&S, p. 26 2:3:22). |
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"The Chekilli legend ... : ... the Earth opened in the West, ... and the Cussetaws {Kasihta} came out ... . ... " |
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"towards the west, is the place where the sun sets ... . |
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At first they perceived a red smoke, and then ... a great fire which blazed upward, |
"was just about to set ... alight ... fire, when [Apollon] providentially appeared" (GM @114.f). |
The deity Red Glare presides over this place." (CM&S, p. 26 2:3:21) |
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"on the marble navel-stone" (GM @114.g). |
"abundance of green male-yellow" (CM&S, p. 26 2:3:21). |
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"While the Erinnyes were still fast asleep," (GM @114.g) |
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"Supernatural powers must appear to the would-be shaman in a dream ... . |
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"[Worestes] ... soon lost his wits" (GM @114.h). |
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Once summoned, he typically suffers madness" (HTS, p. 285). |
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"He wandered far ..., pursued by the tireless Erinnyes and constantly purified with both with the blood of pigs and with running water" GM @114.h). |
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Ipili : "she saw the flying fox stopper (deke). She removed the stopper, and there was a flood." ("S&RI", p. 45) -- Her brother "created ditches ... so that the pig could eat worms" ("S&RI", p. 46). |
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"an unwrought stone, named the stone of ... the Reliver" (GM @114.i). |
"numerous collar-short jades" (CM&S, p. 26 2:3:21). |
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"he bit off a finger to placate these black goddesses" (GM @114.j). |
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Foi : An unmarried daughter's 2 fingers were bitten off by a pig ("HV&M", pp. 19 & 21); a man amputated 2 of his own fingers (ibid., p. 24). |
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"woman was no more than the inert furrow into which the husbandman cast his seed" (GM @114.n). |
"The deity Bedrush Harvest" (CM&S, p. 26 2:3:21). |
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"to let fall a drop of their own heart's blood which would ... blight the crops." (GM @115.a) |
"Mount Glaze." (CM&S, p. 26 2:3:21) |
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"altars proper to Underworld deities should be theirs" (GM @115.a). [residencies in the Netherworld are of lengthy duration] |
"in truth the great god Long River." (CM&S, p. 26 2:3:20) |
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and made this singing noise. ... |
"soothed their anger" (GM @115.a). |
"knows how to sing and dance." (CM&S, p. 26 2:3:20) |
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They had taken and saved some of the fire from the mountain" (MR, p. 24). |
"a torchlight procession" (GM @115.b). |
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The Erinues "are called Eumenides ... where none may enter their ancient grove" (GM @115.c). |
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"Indian flying foxes ... in a huge banyan tree ... seek protection from a God named Muni" ("SFFI"). Goddess Muni is mother of (Agni Puran.am 19 -- PE, s.v. "Muni I.", p. 509a) the Yaks.a[-]s (tree-deities). The flying Muni-s who associate with Vata (R.c Veda 136:6 -- W"Muniandi -- Reference in R.c Veda") may somewhat be aequivalent to Eddic Munin the flying pet of |
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"wear no more terrible an aspect" (GM @115.d). |
"has no face and no eyes." (CM&S, p. 26 2:3:20) |
O`dinn (O.H.G. Wuotan : cognate with Skt \Vata\) the Twi-blindi ('twice-blind'). |
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"for the hearing of ... trials" (GM @115.d). [evidence adduced in court-trials is ofttimes muddled] |
"He is Muddle Thick [\Hun Tun\]." (CM&S, p. 26 2:3:20) |
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"At length they took a motherless child, and struck it against the pole; and thus killed the child." (MR, p. 25) |
"they ... nail his severed head to a cross" (GM @116.b). |
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"the sacred fire, welling up from [Tartaros}, ... burns" (GM @116.b). |
"cinnabar fire." (CM&S, p. 26 2:3:20) |
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"After this ..., they came to a white footpath. The grass and everything around it were white" (MR, p. 26). |
"This temple is ... approached by ... steps; its altar of white marble" (GM @116.b). |
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"The Cussitaws digged a pit and stretched over it a net made of hickory-bark." (MR, p. 27) |
"Taurian Artemis has ... titles : ... Artemis [Diktunne]" (GM @116.c). [\diktus\ 'net'] |
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Then they enticed, into this ambuscade, the "lion" (MR, p. 27), viz., cougar. |
"The Taurians ... addressed her as [Orsi-lokhe]" (GM @116.d). [\orsi-\ 'stirring' + \lokhos\ 'ambush'] |
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"There were “stout little people” who were about eight inches tall and yellow in color. ... And there were |
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"looks like a yellow sack." (CM&S, p. 26 2:3:20) |
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not seen little people,” who were about twelve inches tall, invisible" (CM&LCI, p. 35). |
"they hid in a sea-cave." (GM @116.e) |
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"Now, Iphi-geneia had been ... wrapped in a cloud, and wafted" (GM @116.d). |
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"to be cleansed in the sea, and offer ... a torchlight" (GM @116.f). |
"into Hot[-]water Valley." (CM&S, p. 26 2:3:20) |
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"the home of [Khruses 'golden']" (GM @116.h). |
"It has a great amount of gold" (CM&S, p. 26 2:3:20). |
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"His bones, however, they keep to this day; one one side they are red, on the other, blue." (MR, p. 27) |
"he himself died ..., his bones being later transferred" (GM @116.k). |
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Cherokee myth : "the sun long ago grew jealous ... because the people of Earth always looked at her with twisted-up faces" ("FF5D"). |
"[Astrabakos] ... driven mad at the sight" (GM @116.l). [\a-strabes\ 'untwisted'] {By means of Condor-man's twisting a woman's hair, "The sky turns darker." (ANS&P, p. 15)} |
"Mount Sky." (CM&S, p. 26 2:3:20) |
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"They came to ... Whooping-creek, so called from the whooping of cranes" (MR, p. 28). |
"she chides the floggers : 'Harder, harder! ...'"" (GM @116.m) [Such chiding is a sort of whooping.] |
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"the Pachucolas gave them black drink, as a sign of friendship" (MR, p. 29). |
"[Worestes] ended the feud" (GM @117.a). |
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Creek myth : "Twisted Thunder" is a "Great Yellow Snake" (CM&LCI, p. 34). |
"[Worestes] ... died of a snake bite" (GM @117.c). |
"There are piles of serpents" (CM&S, p. 26 2:3:19). |
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"stroke rings upon stroke" (GM @117.d). |
"a noise that is usually like a bell and stone chimes." (CM&S, p. 26 2:3:19) |
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Likhant- ['licking' : cf. 'tongue-lashing" = 'cursing'] stole from a smith while acting as that smith's guest (GM @117.e). |
"The deity Old Child" (CM&S, p. 26 2:3:19). {cf. the Kumara-adi brethren, who appear to be young boys, though they are really primaeval antients.} |
The Sanaka-adi brethren cursed two doorkeepers (Jaya and Vi-jaya) for not admitting them (Bhagavata Upa-puran.a 7 -- PE, s.v. "Jaya XI."). |
"Chief-of-Deer was described as a small deer ... only about two or three inches tall" (CM&LCI, p. 36). |
From mt Olumpos, "[ATe] was sent hurtling down to earth." (GM @118.e) {She fell, in effect, "from out of the blue".} [Cognately-named Goddess \AyaTi\ (PE, q.v.) gave birth to Pran.a 'breath'.] |
"Mount Blue[-]roan[-]horse." (CM&S, p. 25 2:3:19) {"mares often turn their hind-quarters to the wind and breed" (GM @1.a, cf. @48.2) : they are breathed upon by Boreas} |
{The (praesumably) heavenly-caerulean (blue) realm whence was hurled goddess Ate might be aequivalent to (PE, q.v.) mt Nila-giri ('blue mountain').} |
Florida Mikasuki : "With its sharp breast this ... tears up the earth, making a deep furrow." (CM&LCI, p. 34) |
"spear-sceptre ... lying buried ... on the frontier" (GM @118.f). [a frontier-boundary is a sharp division between states] |
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"Tall Man, as described by the Oklahoma Seminoles, ... was ... covered with gray hair. He ... was reported to have a penetrating odor like the smell of a “stagnant muddy pond.”72" (CM&LCI, p. 35) |
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"There is an animal ... which ... has a white body ...; its long hair is like a reed raincoat. {Heavy rainfall may make for muddy ponds wherein reeds can flourish.} |
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Heroine Galanthis (or Galinthias) {'weasel'} overcame a difficulty hindring the parturition of infant Hera-klees (GM @118.g). |
Its name is the proud[-]prowl." (CM&S, p. 25 2:3:18) |
Gopika Nila (PE, s.v. "Nila II.") became excessively "proud", until "she stood with her legs parted" : this stance may be intended for parturition. |
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"A profound knowledge of augury led him especially to welcome the appearance of vultures" (GM @119.i). |
"Three green birds" (CM&S, p. 25 2:3:18). |
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"had begotten ... : ... [Prokris {\PROKRIs\ is cognate with Skt \PRAKR.tI\}], the eldest [daughter of king Thespios], |
"a place where frequent weird rainstorms ... come from." (CM&S, p. 25 2:3:17) |
"Prakr.ti ... brings rain ... . ... |
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bearing him the twins [Anti-leon {'against-the-lion'}]" (GM @120.b). |
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Her divine vehicle (Vahana) is either lion or tiger" (KK"GD"). |
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"blocked up the two tunnels ... through which the river [Kephissos] emptied" (GM @121.d). |
"The deity Long[-]river Doubt lives here." (CM&S, p. 25 2:3:17) |
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"the gods had not punished ... ill-treatment of ... heralds ... [by] ... the Nose-docker." (GM @121.e) [These noses must have been treated as if tallies counted in honor of that Nose-docker.] |
"Mount Tally[-]honour." (CM&S, p. 25 2:3:17) |
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"After many years spent recovering his former prosperity, he found himself rich indeed" (GM @121.f). |
"It is effective against misfortune." (CM&S, p. 25 2:3:16) |
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"A[-]zeus too." (GM @121.f) [\a-zeus\ = Skt \a-dyau\ 'no sky'] |
"Its name is the sky-dog." (CM&S, p. 25 2:3:16) [praesumably, dogging (chasing away) the sky, leaving no sky] |
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"created terror throughout ... by ... the river [Hera-kleios]" (GM @122.b). [thus, he muddied (besmirched) his own reputation] |
"The River Mud[-]wash rises here" (CM&S, p. 25 2:3:16). |
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The madness of Hera-klees eliminated possibility for (put-into-the-shade ) "the brilliant futures that had been planned" for his sons (GM @122.c). |
"Mount Shade." (CM&S, p. 25 2:3:16) |
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"[Apollon] ... arrows, feathered with eagle feathers {fledging being located nigh the arrow's butt-end}; |
"Its name is the end[-] |
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[He-phaistos] ... a golden breast-plate {a high-priest's caerimonial breast-plate being conventionally square in shape}" (GM @122.f). |
square." (CM&S, p. 25 2:3:15) |
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"Isti-papa or Man Eater" : "This creature ... suggests ... the jaguar" (CM&LCI, p. 35). |
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"an animal here which looks like a scarlet leopard ... . ... |
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"clashed their jaws ... and terrified his opponents." (GM @122.f) |
Its name is the wrangler." (CM&S, p. 25 2:3:15) {I.e., 'the debater', doing "jawboning".} |
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"bronze-tipped ... |
"Mount Brilliant[-] |
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wild-olive" (GM @122.f). |
artemesia {read \artemisia\}." (CM&S, p. 25 2:3:15) |
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"with a pelt proof against ... stone." (GM @123.a) |
"Prime God [Yu:an S^en], Stone Clan." (CM&S, p. 25 2:3:14) |
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"such a blow on the muzzle" (GM @123.e) of the head. |
"all have head markings." (CM&S, p. 25 2:3:14) |
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"a brazen urn ..., he took refuge in it" (GM @123.g). [one would normally take refuge in the "keep" of a castle] |
"Mount Long[-]keep." (CM&S, pp. 24-25 2:3:14) |
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"Mount [Pontinos] ..., bounded ... by the river [Pontinos]" (GM @124.b). {in Latin, \pont-\ is a bridge, ideally of stone, having water flowing under its arches} |
"Pile[-]rock ... is a rocky gateway ... where the Great River oozes through" (CM&S, p. 24 2:3:13). |
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"the Mysteries of [Lernaian] [Demeter] are celebrated ... where ... [Perse-phone] ... descended" (GM @124.b). [Demeter wept for her daughter Perse-phone.] |
"The River Weep rises here" (CM&S, p. 24 2:3:12). |
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"from sprouting new heads" (GM @124.e). [alike unto the spokes emerging from a cartshaft?] |
"Cartshaft Mound." (CM&S, p. 24 2:3:12) |
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"dipped his arrows in the gall {viz., bile}." (GM @124.f) {"Bile salts are another class of biologically relevant olfactory stimuli in fishes" ("BSETS").} |
"Its name is the stink[-]meet. It feeds on fish." (CM&S, p. 24 2:3:11) |
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"The Oklahoma Seminoles called these Fire Dogs." (CM&LCI, p. 36) |
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"There is an animal hre which looks like a dog, but |
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"the [Keruneian] Hind ... . This swift, dappled creature |
it has the markings of a leopard and ... |
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had golden horns" (GM @125.a). |
horns" (CM&S, p. 24 2:3:11). |
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"I will go and get water" (ZM, vol. 2, p. 91). |
"Nephele, ... cloudy grandmother, then poured down a smart shower of rain, which ... made the ground slippery." (GM @126.b) |
"Queen Mother of the West ... presides over the Catastrophes from the Sky" (CM&S, p. 24 2:3:11). |
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Threat uttered to a woman : "Go with me. If you don't, I will cut your head off." (ZM, vol. 2, p. 91) |
"[Homados {'din of a noisy throng'}] the [Arkadian] ... tried to rape [Euru-stheus]'s sister [Alku-one]" (GM @126.d). |
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"threw the meal up into the sky and saw a good trail there." (ZM, vol. 2, p. 93) |
"had caused ... some years before, by throwing" (GM @126.e). |
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"to chase ... beside the river [eRUMANTHos]." (GM @126.f) |
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The mother of RUMAN.-vanT (MBh, "Vana Parvan" 116 -- PE, s.v. "Ruman.van II.") "was late in fetching water from the river." |
"rubbed themselves until they were white." (ZM, vol. 2, p. 93) |
"drove it into a deep snow drift" (GM @126.f). |
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"Put your foot into the crack and it will open" (ZM, vol. 2, p. 94). |
"was accidentally wounded ... pierced his left foot" (GM @126.g). |
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"among the stars ... the Bowman in the Zodiac is ... one [Krotos {'rattling noise, made to collect a swarm of bees'}] ..., greatly beloved by |
"On the summit of Mount Hornet[-]mother ... are numerous green semi-precious stones" (CM&S, p. 24 2:3:10). |
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his foster-sisters, the [Mousai]." (GM @126.g) [The Mousai are 9 in number.] |
"This is the Nine Powers of the Sky." (CM&S, p. 24 2:3:10) {cf. Puthagorean "music of he sphairoi", which may be counted 9 } |
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"saw a gopher sitting on a sandhill." (ZM, vol. 2, p. 95) |
"Augeias ... some ... call ... the son of [Poseidon]." (GM @127.a) [Poseidon is god praesiding over seas and over sandy beaches.] |
"a place called Flowing Sands" (CM&S, p. 24 2:3:10). |
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"the valley pastures ... could no longer be ploughed" (GM @127.b). |
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Phuleus witnessed an offer for cleansing the cattle-yards (GM @127.c). |
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"the idea of sacrificing cows" was entertained; |
"mountain lion bit at him" (ZM, vol. 2, p. 95). |
"charged at ..., mistaking him for a lion" (GM @127.c). |
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"The knives of the ladder were broken" (ZM, vol. 2, p. 95). |
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{A caerimonial ladder having knives for some rungs is a Taoist ordeal.} |
"put the dead man's bones there" (ZM, vol. 2, p. 95). |
When there were "diverted the neighbouring rivers Alpheos" (GM @127.d) , |
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{cf. (after each cremation) depositing of bones of the dead in river Ganga} |
"baskets covered with with buckskin hanging" (ZM, vol. 2, p. 96) [= hamper for the washing?]. |
therewith this offer "to cleanse the cattle yards" was fulfilled. |
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this idea (known as Go-medha in the Brahman.a-s) was fulfilled by |
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PhuLeus [< *\BHuLeu-\], "subpoenaed ..., testified to the truth" (GM @127.e). |
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Pr.s.a-dhra [< *\BHL.so-dhro-\] (Caraka Ayus-veda -- J&AM, p. 189) at |
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"[Phuleus] then went to [Doulikhion {\doulikhoeis\ is Ionian for \dolikhos\ < *\DOLIGHo-\ 'lengthy'}]; and |
"The deity Long Ride presides over this mountain." (CM&S, p. 24 2:3:10) |
his dirgha-sattva, [*\DILGHo-\ >] Dirgha-sattva (PE, q.v. -- MBh, "Vana Parvan" 82) being the name of a particular holy site. |
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[Hera-klees] to ... Olenos" (GM @127.f). [\OLoNthos\ 'fig-fruit' {fig-blossoms are fertilized only by wasps}] |
"Mount Hornet[-]mother." (CM&S, p. 24 2:3:10) |
\Bhr.nga\ 'bumblebee' is cognate with \Bhr.gu\, name of the father of (MBh, "Adi Parvan" 5-6 -- PE, s.v. "Cyavana 2)" the guru of (WL"Pr.s.adhra 1b)") Pr.s.a-dhra. |
"different kachinas ... whipped Knife Wing." (ZM, vol. 2, p. 96) |
"brazen-winged, man-eating birds" (GM @128.a). |
"flash[-]wing" (CM&S, p. 24 2:3:9). |
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"had flocked to the Stymphalian Marsh." (GM @128.a) |
"to empty into Millet Marsh." (CM&S, p. 24 2:3:9) |
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"grabbed a tree and uprooted it" (ZM, vol. 2, p. 96). |
"clacked the castanets, or shook the rattle" (GM @128.b). |
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"thought he had a shirt of ice" (ZM, vol. 2, p. 96). |
"learned to wear protective cuirasses" (GM @128.c). |
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"each of the girls ... ran away." (ZM, vol. 2, p. 97) |
"maidens with birds' legs." (GM @128.d) [do they swim by paddling joyously with their legs?] |
"Mount Joy[-]swim." (CM&S, p. 24 2:3:9) |
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The Kretan Bull "was ravaging [Krete], especially the region watered by the river Tethris" (GM @129.a). [\Tethris\ < *\D[H]EDHrI-\ is cognate with Vaidik \DADHI-an~c\.] |
"Mount Big[-]tub." (CM&S, p. 24 2:3:8) {is this tub for holding the curds (dadhi) being sprinkled (an~c) by Dadhi-an~c for the As`vinau, as per Madhu-Vidya?} |
DADHIca (PE, q.v.) is birthplace of "Angiras the son of Sarasvati" : "Sarasvati returned to Dadhica ... the son born to her by him" (MBh, "S`alya Parvan" 51 -- PE, s.v. "Sarasvati II.(xv)"). |
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"[Plouto-dotes] ('giver of wealth') became a common rite both in [Arkadia] (Pausanias : viii.19.2) and [Ludia] ([Strabon] : xiv.1.44)" (GM @129.1). |
"The River Black rises here" (CM&S, pp. 23-24 2:3:8). {to steal wealth from any brahmin-s would be a blackguardly act} |
"Puru[-]ravas {'plutocrat-reaving/plundering'} stole the wealth of some brahmins." (MBh, "Adi Parvan" 75 -- PE, s.v. "Pururavas I.4)(i)") |
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"caused the sea to flood the low-lying plain; ... |
"The River Wide[-]flow rises here ... |
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dragged ... around the lake that had now formed" (GM @130.b). |
to empty into ... Ugly[-]mire." (CM&S, p. 23 2:3:8) |
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"two streams, both called [Selenos], and flowing in opposite directions, surround it." (GM @131.d) |
"into the River Flood[-]sky." (CM&S, p. 23 2:3:8) |
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"offering quarter, but she chose to die rather than yield." (GM @131.g) [thus, he did not reach any productive accord with her] |
"The Great River ... flows south {the direction of Yama and of death} to ... empty into the River No[-]reach." (CM&S, p. 23 2:3:8) |
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"included it among the sacred regalia of the Lydian kings." (GM @131.j) |
"It presides over the Great God's Hundred Equipments." (CM&S, p. 23 2:3:8) |
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"they used to shoot accurately at their pursuers" (GM @131.l). |
"When it stings birds and animals they die." (CM&S, p. 23 2:3:8) |
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"Gorgon[e]s ... had ... hidden in an oak-wood {read \wold\}" (GM @131.m). |
"This deity presides over ... the Great God's Park for the Seasons." (CM&S, p. 23 2:3:8) |
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"after selecting the most suitable sites ..., founded a number of coastal cities" (GM @131.n). |
"This is in truth the Great God's City Here Below." (CM&S, p. 23 2:3:8) |
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"She also ... built the city of [Mitulene], named after a sister" (GM @131.n). |
"the Mound of Offspring[-]line." (CM&S, p. 23 2:3:8) |
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Geruoneus "had been born with three heads, six hands" (GM @132.a). |
"the Sky God ... has eight feet and two heads" (CM&S, p. 23 2:3:7). |
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"something bit him on one side of the leg; then it bit him again on the other side." ("UChT", p. 154) |
"by the two-headed dog [Orthros]" (GM @132.b). |
[Soninke] {"the left eye of a red dog ... bit Garakhe's legs" (GuAM, s.v. "Marain Jagu", p. 152).} |
A pet hound ate a scab which had fallen from the leg of king Ue-nuku. |
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"The dog [Orthros] rushed at him ..., but [was stricken] lifeless" (GM @132.d). |
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"Uenuku and his son Toi at once killed the animal and ate it." (IEMM&L, s.v. "Te Arawa", p. 196b) |
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"he sailed ...; but the Titan [Okeanos] ... made the goblet pitch violently upon the waves ..., which frightened [Okeanos] into calming the sea." (GM @132.c) |
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"During the voyage ..., ... Ngatoro ... , ... began to send Te Arawa down to destruction the throat of Te Parata, the monster ... of the ocean. ... |
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"renamed it Gadira, or 'Fenced City'." (GM @132.d) |
"Mount Ever with its four levels." (CM&S, p. 23 2:3:7) |
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"the tapeworms ... wrapped themselves around" ("UChT", p. 156). {Thus, their action resembled that of Te Parata the whirlpool.} |
"remarkable for a spring which ebbs {i.e., becometh exhausted} at flood tide, and flows at ebb tide; and ... |
"The Exhausted Ghosts live on ..., each one staying" (CM&S, p. 23 2:3:7). |
the vessel began to slide into the abyss, but finally Ngatoro ... brought the ship back up" (IEMM&L, s.v. "Te Arawa", p. 197b). |
"This tree was the dangerous being's decoy." ("UChT", p. 156) |
equally famous for a secret tree that takes diverse forms." (GM @132.e) |
"The Ghost of Carob Tree {Marain Jagu's sistre's name being \Henten KuRuBe\} |
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"The dangerous being ... removed the man's heart and blood |
"the cattle must be cupped ..., lest they choke for excess of blood" (GM @132.e). |
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and threw them in the canyon." ("UChT", p. 156) |
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lives on Mount All[-]navel." (CM&S, p. 23 2:3:7) |
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"Then the ... youngest had a dream and learned" ("UChT", p. 156) [a dazzling revelation?]. |
"embarked in the golden goblet, which |
"the glare from it is dazzling" (CM&S, p. 23 2:3:7). |
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he then sailed to [Tartessos] and gratefully returned" (GM @132.d). |
"He journeys around the four seas" (CM&S, p. 23 2:3:7). |
"The vessel then sail straight across to ... Maketu" (IEMM&L, s.v. "Te Arawa", p. 198). |
Addressing his hat, "He began to sing, Stick out your tongue, my bouquet." ("UChT", p. 157) {a bouquet is usually inserted into a cone} |
"[Norag-] ... led a colony to [Sardon]" (GM @132.d). [Norag- is namesake of the nuraghi, the peaked towers on Sardon.] |
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"a temple of [Kronos]" (GM @132.e). [Kronos "had turned himself into a stallion" (@151.g).] |
"this deity has a horse's body and a human face" (CM&S, pp. 23-22 2:3:7). |
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"a spring which ebbs at flood tide, and flows at ebb tide" (GM @132.e). |
"The River Mound[-]time rises here" (CM&S, p. 22 2:3:7). |
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"They set fire to the tree. ... The ashes turned into small bats." ("UChT", p. 157) |
"a secret tree that takes diverse forms." (GM @132.e) |
"it will cure madness." (CM&S, p. 22 2:3:6) {"to go bats" is 'to go mad'; "batty" is 'mad'} |
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"There was a salmon in the trap." ("UChT", p. 158) |
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"numerous patterned flying-fish" (CM&S, p. 22 2:3:6). |
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"worked at his canoe. ... His canoe was just about finished." ("UChT", p. 159) |
"he was splendidly honoured" (GM @132.f). |
"Mount Great[-]tool." (CM&S, p. 22 2:3:6) [a great tool may produce splendid art-forms] |
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"rid their island of ... noxious creatures" (GM @132.f). |
"murdered ... . The great god then hacked them to death on the ... |
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"They put two rocks in their place to keep the canoe steady." ("UChT", p. 159) |
"he set up pillars on either side of the straits" (GM @132.f). |
Craggy Cliff" (CM&S, p. 22 2:3:5). |
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"the [Hispanic] city of Onoba" (GM @132.g). [Strong's 6036 \<ANUWB\ 'fruited'] |
"The ghosts and spirits of the sky and the earth eat this gem" (CM&S, p. 21 2:3:4). |
cf. in Kojiki and in Nihongi : crunching of gems by biting (as if these gems were dried foods) by god-and-goddess |
"she had found ... the little stone imaginable, somewhat blue." ("UChT", p. 160) |
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"The lapis lazuli of Mount Secret are exquisite" (CM&S, p. 21 2:3:4). |
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"the old lady turned into a swamp. |
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"Millet Marsh." (CM&S, p. 21 2:3:4) |
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The younger woman ... was Earthquake" ("UChT", p. 160). |
"on the Sacred Promontory in Lusitania" (GM @132.i). [Could this be a proleptic allusion to the great earthquake which later devastated Lisbon?] |
"Mount Peak[-]worship" (CM&S, p. 21 2:3:3). |
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Bluejay went to where the sky, in meeting the horizon, was moving up and down; and jumped through the space left momentarily between them ("UChT", p. 161). |
"forced [Abule] and [Kalpe] into temporary union and went across the resultant bridge" (GM @132.j). [thus, these were traveled atop, not around] |
"Mount Not[-]round." (CM&S, p. 21 2:3:3) |
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"Moon took some little chips from his flakings and threw them in Bluejay's face" ("UChT", p. 161). |
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"Mount Long[-]sands. |
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"He blew on Bluejay's eyes to remove the chips. |
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The River Limpid rises here ... to empty |
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But a bit remained for Bluejay's eyes still look glassy." ("UChT", p. 162) |
"passed through the territory of what is now [Abdera], a [Phoinikian] settlement" (GM @132.j). [cf. \BuDuwR\ 'to come suddenly, come unexpectedly' (DMWA, p. 56b)] |
into the River Glaze." (CM&S, p. 21 2:3:2) {one's eyesight may briefly become glazed (in astonishment) by viewing a scene unexpectedly} |
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"reached home without any trouble." ("UChT", p. 162) |
"[Alesia] as the hearth" (GM @132.j). [\alesia\ = \asulia\ 'inviolability (of a place of refuge)'] |
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"The people can gather them for food." ("UChT", p. 162) |
"[Bebrukan] princess" (GM @132.j). [\bebrokos\ 'be eaten'] |
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"they'll strike the bottom with their spears." ("UChT", p. 164) |
"a shower of stones hailed down" (GM @132.k). |
"it is good at throwing things." (CM&S, p. 21 2:3:1) |
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"when the people hunt you; you will jump, and look back." ("UChT", p. 166) |
"four heifers, which he dragged backwards by their tails" (GM @132.l). |
"the Mound of the Great God's Smitten Beasts" (CM&S, p. 20 2:3:1). |
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