Page:Folk-lore - A Quarterly Review. Volume 1, 1890.djvu/385

Rh (2) The Fair Woman’s Hill.—The Death of Conlaoch.—The Lay of the Heads.—Deirdre.—Fraoch.—Cormac’s Birth.—The Battle of Gabhra.—The Lay of the Great Fool. —Heroic Gaelic Literature.—Conclusion.

Sect. VII. Irish MSS., Brit. Museum.

Sect. VIII. Growth of Folk-lore: Trash Bags; Sorted Rubbish.—The Festivities at the House of Conan of Cearn Sleibhe, 1780.—A Geological Illustration.—A Breton Structure.—A Scotch Structure.—A Miniature Structure upon a large old Plan.—Irish Structure: The Dinn Seanchas.—Minglay Manners.—A Norse Structure: The Edda.—An Eastern Structure: The Arabian Nights.—A Sanscrit Structure: The Beast Epic.—Plan of Structures in the East and West.—An Irish Structure: The Book of Lismore, 1512-26.—A Medical (sic; rete mediæval?) Structure: O’Cein’s Leg.—A Fossil in a Structure: Conall Gulban, A.D.—The Materials of the Broken Structure of O’Cein’s Leg.—A Scotch Structure: Ossian.—Conclusion.

Sect. IX. The Growth of Folk-lore: The Drama.

Sect. X. Folk-lore and National Epics.—Homer.—National Poems and Folk-lore.

Sect. XI. Fact and Fiction.—The Aryan Theory.—Romans, Saxons, Danes, Norsemen.—Native Literature.—Kurroglou: Gaelic and Perso-Turkish Tales.—Master-thief: The Siege and Love Story.

Sect. XII. Early Scoto-Irish-Scandinavian Romantic History.—Keating, etc., 1629.—Cuchullain.—Children of Usnoth, Cumhall, Fionn, Caoilte, etc.—Oisein. O’Mahony’s Keating.—Fionn and the Feinne.—Ancient Fenian Warrior Bards. Fionn’s Pedigree.—Oral Fenian Pedigree.

Sect. XIII. Scoto-Irish Heroes and their Religion, A.D. 284-591 (pp. 178-189).

Sect. XIV. Scoto-Irish Heroes in Tradition in the first-third centuries (pp. 190-201). Sect. XV. Ethnological and Social (pp. 202-220).