Page:The Folk-Lore Journal Volume 4 1886.djvu/384

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376

INDEX.

"Corbie's Hole," the [Children's

Amusements], 143 Cornish feasts and " feasten " customs

(M. A. Courtney), 109, 221 Courtney (M. A.): Cornish Feasts and

" Feasten " Customs, 109, 221 Crane (Thos. Fred.): Italian Popular

Tales, 89 Crow, legends of the swan, the widgeon,

and the, 26 Cuckoo, the, 18 Culture-lore in the study of history,

Eolk-lore as the complement of (J.

S. Stuart- Glennie), 213 Customs, Cornish feasts and " feasten "

(Miss M. A. Courtney), 109, 221 Donegal, &;c. 361

Dabbhapuppha Jataka, the, 52

"Dance t' yir Daddie " [Children's Amusements], 150

Days, borrowing, 258

Dictionary of Kashmiri proverbs and sayings, explained and illustrated from the rich and interesting folk- lore of the valley (Rev. J. Hinton Knowles), 96

Dipi Jataka, the, 45

Dog stories, 17

Donegal customs, &c. 361

Donegal superstitions (G. H. Kinahan), 255 ; Sheetiu cattle, 255 ; Saint Bridget's well, 256 ; Sea-swallows on Lesson Fern, 258 ; Superstition in the co. Donegal, 258 ; Borrowing days, 258

Diita Jataka, the, 54

Easter customs in Cornwall, 223

fidjeg (the ass), the father of the Chinese nation, 23

English customs, notes on some old- fashioned: the Mummers, the Morris dancers, Whitsun-ales, Lamb -ales (G. A. Rowell), 97

Eren tsain and Bai gu e ider Khan, 40

Falconer (I. G. N. Keith): Kalilah and Dimnah; or, the Fables of Bid])ai, 185

Farmer's boy, the, a folk-song, 262

Feasts, Cornish, and "feasten" cus- toms (M. A. Courtney), 109, 221

Fight of the witches, translated from the oral original of the Pussama- quaddy dialect, by Abby Langdon Alger, 1

First people, the, 25

Fishnig, folk-lore of the herring-, 14

Fit, the good and ill, 12

" Fittiekins " [Children's Amuse- ments], 143

Folk-lore in Mongolia (C. Gardner): the cuckoo, 18; the bee, 18; Mes- senger of Poland bird and the snake, 19; Olbe Letyaga, 19; short sayings about animals, 20; accounts of the origins of nations, 20 ; Khukhu bukha (the grey ox), the father of the Mongol nation, 23; fildjeg (the ass) the father of the Chinese nation, 23; Gakhai (the pig), the father of the Kirghis nation, 24; the first people, 25; Karagan, 26; legends of the swan, the widgeon, and the crow, explaining why it is wicked to kill them, 26; the hare's tail, 27; the camel and the moral (reindeer), 28 ; the fox and the wolf, 29 ; legends about Sheduir Van, 29; Sartaktai, 31; Boroltai Ku, 32 ; Khovugu and Khaduin- Dziuge, 37; Eren tsain and Bai gu e ider Khan, 40; the White Khan and Gunuin Khara, 41 ; Khabul- dei Mergen and Bogu (the stag), 44

Folk-lore of the sea (Rev Walter Gregor), 7; the storm, 7; the tide, 9; the boat, 10; the line, 12; the good and the ill fit, &c. 12; the herring-fishing, 14; the haddock, &c. 16; dog stories, 17

Folk-lore, principles of the classifica- tion of (J. S. Stuart-Glennie), 75

classification of (Charlotte S.

Burne), 158

science of, with tables of

spirit basis of belief and custom (Capt. R. C. Temple), 193

as the complement of culture-

lore in the study of history (J. S. Stuart-Glennie), 213

in Southern India (Pandit

S. M. Natesa Sastri), 267

Kafiir (Geo. McCall TheaD,

270

bibliography of vernacular

publications in the Panjab (Capt. R. C. Temple), 273

place of the science of (J. S.

Stuart-Glennie), 363

Shropshire, edited by Char-

lotte Sophia Burne, 365 Folk-songs, essays in the study of ( Countess Martinengo - Cesaresco) , 271