Page:Folk-lore - A Quarterly Review. Volume 10, 1899.djvu/509

 Reviews. 467

131. The dove.

132. The animal that forgives and has horns hke a cross.

133. The yoke-man and the snake.

134. The ass.

135. The silly wife (with variant).

136. The favourite.

137. Who is authorised to judge ?

138. The two brethren and the old monk.

139. Meliq and reader.

140. The money-changing Tartar.

141. The priest and the Kadi.

142. The Christian and the infidel, and how they discussed the faith (with two variants).

143. The Soft of Romkla and the elder.

144. The shoe-maker and the anchorite.

145. The Tartar's prayer.

146. The silly Tartar lady and the cunning man.

147. The Tartars' law.

148. The jester's child.

149. The jester who found a fish (with variant).

150. The repentant sinner and his penitence (with two variants).

151. Father Daniel and Eulougi the stone-cutter.

152. The arts of a woman.

153. The silent king and his son.

154. The egg of discord.

155. The robber and Satan,

156. The thief and the cock.

157. The godchild of Gabriel the archangel.

158. The fox and the tortoise (with variant).

159. The rich man.

160. The three camels and the three foxes.

161. The ploughman and the stork (with variant).

162. The village of Thiur {i.e. crooked).

163. The hares and the frogs (with two variants).

164. The ape and the mirror.

165. The poor man's prayer.

166. The camel and the fox.

The above fill 197 of the 344 pages, of which the second volume consists. The other 147 pages contain in ten distinct

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