Primitive Symbolism, as Illustrated in Phallic Worship: Or the Reproductive Principle

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G. Redway, 1885 - Phallicism - 68 pages

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Page 22 - EJW— The History of the Forty Vezirs; or, The Story of the Forty Morns and Eves.
Page 11 - I can give of this remarkable poet, who affords nearly the most striking instance of neglected genius in our modern school of poetry. This is a more important fact about him than his being a Chartist, which however he was, at any rate for a time. I met him only once in my life, I believe in 1848, at which time he was about thirty, and would hardly talk on any subject but Chartism. His poems (the Studies of Sensation and Event...
Page 39 - A young man, near six feet high, performed the rites of Venus with a little girl about eleven or twelve years of age, before several of our people, and a great number of the natives, without the least sense of its being indecent or improper, but, as appeared, in perfect conformity to the custom of the place. Among the spectators were several women of superior rank, particularly...
Page 12 - An Essay on the Genius of George Cruikshank. BY "THETA" (WILLIAM MAKEPEACE THACKERAY). With all the Original Woodcut Illustrations, a New Portrait of CRUIKSHANK, etched by PAILTHORPE, and a Prefatory Note on THACKERAY AS AN ART CRITIC, by WE CHURCH, Secretary of the Urban Club. " Thackeray's essay 'On the Genius of George Cruikshank...
Page 49 - ... licentiousness ; but it is impossible to believe that depravity of manners would ever have led among any people to the establishment of religious ceremonies. It is probable, on the contrary, that this custom was first introduced in times of simplicity, that the first thought was to honour the deity in the symbol of life which it has given us. Such a ceremony may have excited licentiousness among youths, and have appeared ridiculous to men of education in more refined, more corrupt, and more enlightened...
Page 8 - Tobacco Talk and Smokers' Gossip : An amusing miscellany of fact and anecdote relating to the "Great plant " in all its forms and uses, including a selection from nicotian literature.
Page 4 - Among other entries will be found a remarkable novel, published in instalments, and never issued in a separate form, and several productions in verse not generally known to be from Mr. SWINBURNE'S pen.
Page 49 - A similar remark has been made by Voltaire. Speaking of the worship of Priapus, he says, " our ideas of propriety lead us to suppose that a ceremony which appears to us so infamous could only be invented by licentiousness ; but it is impossible to believe that depravity of manners would ever have led among any people to the establishment of religious ceremonies. It is probable, on the contrary, that this custom was first introduced in times...
Page 22 - ... household labours. A carpenter does the like homage to his hatchet, his adze, and other tools ; and likewise offers sacrifices to them. A Brahman does so to the style with which he is going to write ; a soldier to the arms he is to use in the field ; a mason to his trowel.
Page 17 - The Heptameron ; OR, Tales and Novels of Margaret, Queen of Navarre. Now first done completely into English prose and verse, from the original French, by ARTHUR MACHEN.

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