Page:Folk-lore - A Quarterly Review. Volume 10, 1899.djvu/506

 464 Reviews,

17. The flies and the bees and the ants (with one variant).

18. The camel's colt, the donkey's, and the pig (with three variants).

19. The two cocks.

20. The match-making weasel.

21. The mouse and the camel (with one variant).

22. The jester with the wallet (with variant).

23. The crabs (?) and lobsters and the eagle.

24. The crow with the cheese in his beak and the fox (with four variants).

25. The wise doctor and the donkey's tail.

26. The lark, king of the birds.

27. The peacock, king of the birds.

28. The jackdaw in other birds' feathers (with variant).

29. The fox and the lobster (with variant).

30. The rich man and his sister's son.

31. The goats and the wolves (with three variants).

32. The overweening believer.

33. The tree {Pordokos) in India (with variant).

34. The partridge and the strange egg.

35. The rich man of Khatchen and his son, the priest who saw Christ.

Tyd. The mime Djis and the merchant (with variant).

37. The two syntekni {i.e. christened together) and the gourd.

38. The king and the man who bought the cripples.

39. The lion, the wolf and the fox (with variant).

40. The wolf and the donkey (with variant).

41. The merchant and the pullet.

42. The fox and the partridge.

43. The fox and the sparrow (with variant).

44. The old Syrian and the Armenian youth (with variant).

45. The cat and mice.

45A. The cat and weasel (with variant).

46. The child and the pullets.

47. The bride and her mother-in-law and father-in-law.

48. The monk who fornicated and sang psalms, and Satan.

49. The fornicating monk and the abbot who saw spiritually.

50. The two companions and the cloth.

51. The match-making rich man and the maiden.

52. The fox and the camel who was near to death.