Iiide.
X.
571
Jews, red-haired, 557 Judas and Cain, red-haired in mediaeval pictures, 558
King who had a Boil on his Face, story
of, 518 Kohler, Dr. Reinhold, death of, 554
Leabhar na Ii Uidhrc, 398 Llwyd and Gwawl, 420 Llyg, or shrew-mouse, 382 Lochan-nan-deaan, 70; Lochan-wan,
70; Loch Leetie, 71 Lot, F. , Swan Children incident, 402 Loth, J. , Les Mabinogion traduiis en
entier, etc. , 405 ; Les mots latins dans
les Ia7ig2ies brittoniques, 388 Lot's Wife, 560 Lunaria, or moon-fern, 382
Mabinogion, Lady Guest's, 403; French
transl. , 405 MacBain, Alex., M.A., "The Baker of
Beauly," 183-190 Macdonald, Rev. Jas. , " Bantu Cus- toms and Legends," 337-359 Magic Songs of the Finns, 49-66 Magpie crossing one's path, 381 Malory's Morte Darthur, 281, 404, 419 Manawyddan and Pwyll, 420 Man , Folk-lore of the Isle of, 387, 401 Man who lived by overreaching others, story of, 92 ; who stood all Night in the River, 519 Manx Folk-lore and Superstitions, 74-91 Marriage, nature of, in Irish civilisa- tion, 394 Marmier, Xavier, 555 Mary the Egyptian, 422 Moon-fern, its affinity for iron, 382 Moore's Folk-lore of the Isle of Man,
387, 401 Mummers, Christmas, (Letter) 550
Names of men, lucky and unlucky, 381 ; errata, 553
Neck, swellings on, origin of, 58
Nemesis, 396
New Year's Day, signs of luck on, 381 ; errata, 553
Notes and Queries, 556
Nutt, Alfred, "The Lai of Eliduc and the Marchen of Little Snow-'\A'bite", 26-48; "Churn Charm, Sympa- thetic Bees," 138; "Celtic Myth and Saga, Report upon the Progress of Research during the past Two Years," 387-424 ; Folk and Hero Tales, 557
Oldfield, A., Aborigines of Australia, "j-z
Ordish, T. Fairman, "Christmas Mum- mers" (Letter), 550
Ossian, French versions of Macpher- son's, 393, 400
Owain, 'U'elsh tale of, 415
Paris, Gaston, on the Lancelot story, 404 Paul, H., Grundriss dcr germ anise htn
Philologie (Rev.), 425 Perceval portion of Grail story, 418 Peredur, Welsh tale of, 402, 415, 418 Perlesvaus, 1^22 Petis de la Croix' Contes Persons, 192 ;
Contes Tiircs, 556 Pflugk-Hartung, ^L, on the Finn-cycle,
398-401 Phillimore, Egerton, Annates Cambria,
404, 405 Pleurisy and Stitch, origin of, 50-58 Price's Archceologia Cornu-Britannica,
556 Pwyll and Manawyddan, 420
Queen Mary (Suffolk legend), 558
Rags at holy wells, 380, 381 Red-haired men unlucky and treacher- ous, 381, 556, 557 Reed-buck, story of Man and, loi Reinach, S. , on Druidism, 389 Rhys, Prof. John, "Manx Folk-lore and Superstitions," H, 74-91 ; " 'First Foot' and the allied Superstitions," 256; "Folk-lore Miscellanea," 375- 386 ; Early Ethnology of the British Isles, 387, 388 ; Studies in the Ar- thurian Legend, 407, 412 Rustem and Sohrab, 395
Saint Bridget's Day, 378
Samoan Tales, II: Fangono, 158-165
Saxo Grammaticus, 396
Scana, demon in Whale-KiiJer (totem
sculpture, Brit. Columbia), 383 Seigneur, Droit du, 394 Shrew-mouse, unlucky, 382, 383 ; errata,
,.553
Sibree, Rev. James, "Divination among the Malagasy," 193-226
Sin- Eater, 145-157, 546
Solemnia Acadeniica, 556
Sommer, Dr., on the Morte Darthur, 404, 419
Spey, a "bloodthirsty" river, 72
Spirits, exorcising, 559
Skin-eruption, origin of, 49
Smith, Cecil, "Recent Greek Archaeo- logy and Folk-lore," 529-545
Stitch and Pleurisy, origin of, 50-58
Stokes, Margaret, Six Months in the Apennines, 403
Stokes, Whitley, Cormac's Glossary, 390; Second Battle of Moytura, 390; Cor- mac's Adventure in the Land of Pro- mise, 392 ; "The Bodleian Dinnshen- chas," 467-516
Stuart-Glennie, J. S. , "Ethnologists f. Anthropologists" (Letter^ 267; "Queries as to Dr. Tylor's Views on Animism," 289-307
Swelling on the Neck, origin of, 58
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