Page:Folk-lore - A Quarterly Review. Volume 10, 1899.djvu/508

 466 Revieivs.

93. The eagle, the partridge and the beetle (with variant).

94. The ant and the dove.

95. The lion and the man (with two variants).

96. The lion, the fox and the bear (with three variants).

97. The lion and the fox.

98. The poor man and the Indian hen.

99. The hunter and the partridge.

100. The jinny ass and her foal. loi. The prince and the flea.

102. The ape and the fisherman.

103. The raven (or jackdaw) and her young.

104. The reed and the trees.

105. The fox and the huntets.

106. The donkey and the dung (with variant).

107. The wood-cutters and the trees. 107A. The arrow and the beam.

108. The rock and the drip of water (with variant).

109. The judgement of God by the spring (Avith variant). no. The merchant and the murderer and the butcher.

111. The dogs and the pickled hide (with two variants).

112. The fox and the snake.

113. The dog and the chanticleer (orator) and the fox.

114. The wolf and the fox and the mule.

115. The chanticleer and the king.

116. The man with the garrulous wife (with variant).

117. The good man and the merchants and the devil that lived in a well.

118. The head elder and his son.

119. The Wiseman's three sayings.

120. The king and his sister's son and the Nayip (vizier).

121. The prayerful youth and the wizard.

122. The unjust king and the good son and the church.

123. The fox and the eagle.

124. The man with the walnut and the water-melon.

125. How the repentant sinner dies.

126. The church and the water-mill.

127. The ass and the horse.

128. The pack-animal.

129. The two-eyed maiidik.

130. The mole.