ort of the
Bureau of American Ethnology, 189596
(WashingtEMRTCon, D.C., 1898), 2, 519-74. 3. see Jane
E. Harrison, Prolegomena to the Study
of Greek Religion (Cambridg
e, 1922), p. 264. 4. [Note from the 19
88 German edition-M.P.S.] In the ftrst draft of this passage, Warburg explained the symbolic power of the serpent image in the following wa
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es the serpent appear in literature and art as a usurping imposter [ein v
? 1. It experiences through the cours