Edward Westermarck

The Origin and Development of the Moral Ideas


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expected to pay in twenty-eight ngugus, or £2 0s.d., as a fine; and this money was taken into the interior, to purchase two sickly persons, to be offered as a sacrifice for all these abominable crimes—one for the land, and one for the river.”230 As will be seen in a following chapter, human sacrifices to rivers are very common in the Niger country. In the cases mentioned by the English missionary, the idea of vicarious expiation is obvious. But I find no evidence of actual sin-transference.

      231 Frazer, op. cit. iii. 112 sq.

      232 Strabo, xi. 4. 7.

      233 Frazer, op. cit. iii. 113.

      234 Herodotus, ii. 39.

      238 Leviticus, xvi. 21.

      239 Seaver, op. cit. p. 160.

      240 Beauchamp, loc. cit. p. 239.

      A sacrifice is expiatory if its object is to avert the supposed anger or indignation of a superhuman being from those