Analysis of information sources in references of the Wikipedia article "Salome" in English language version.
Salome III (H). Mark 6:22–28. Called "Herodias" or "daughter of Herodias" by Mark, "daughter of Herodias" by Matthew (Matt 14:6).
Salome, a young girl tragically confused by the first stirrings of sexual desire, sees the moon as a chaste virginal flower, but nevertheless, is haunted by the repressed memory of her father who was imprisoned and killed in the same cistern as John the Baptist. In the sense of catharsis, one senses not revulsion, but a great torrent of cleansing emotion. Salome brought Freudian psychology to the operatic stage. In the end, Oscar Wilde would have been pleased.