Page:Folk-lore - A Quarterly Review. Volume 11, 1900.djvu/501

 Index.

479

Gotliaiii, All about the Merry Tales of, by A. Stapleton, reviewed, , 425-6

Govinda, title of Krishna, 6

Grafting prosperous in Holy Week, Dorset, 112

Grant Allen, obituary notice of, 53-4

Grateful beasts, in Greek folktale,

"3-5

Grave : enemies not to be buried close together, Wiltshire, 346-7 ; man out of his mind who stuck knife into, Wiltshire, 346 ; sods thrown off by occupant, Dorset, 107

Great Britain, see England ; Scot- land ; Wales

Great Crosby, goose tabooed, 243

Greek folklore : (^see also ^gean : Calymnos ; Cos ; and Cyprus) ; Aiora feast, 22-3 ; donkey's ears cut off, to prevent trespass, 457 ; Easter lamb feast, 260 ; month- names, 209

Greek gods, deified men as, 89

Grettis Saga Asmundarsonar by R. C. Boer, reviewed by F. Y. P., 406- 14

Grierson, G. A., The Water of Life, 433-4

Grompa, see Avezuha

Guatemala, see Patinamit

Guardian spirit, in animal form, Ice- land and Norway, 237-8

Gull, form of soul, 235 ; hunted on the Schlei, July 23rd, 251 ; trans- formed human being, Germany, 236

Gydia, Icelandic, 297-8

Gylo, Greek child-stealing spirit, 143-6

Hackles on stacks, 322

Haddon, A. C, review by, Ling

Roth's Aborigines of Tasmania,

188-9 Hades, among Bella Coola Indians,

303 ; Krishna's visit to, 14 Hahnenschlag, 251-4 Haidarabad, see Ajanta. Hair, associated with rain-making,

Australia, 437 ; clippings buried

to cure epilepsy, Hebrides, 446 Hair, gold, strength of prince in,

Greek folktale, 343 Hakon of Hladir, deities revered by,

291-2

Halfdan the Black, burial of, 294-5

Hampshire, cuckoo respected, 240 ; swift respected, 241 ; North, first animal seen killed, 254

Hananim, the Korean Great Spirit, 326-7

Hands, magical, 402 ; omens from itching of, 381

Hanging, rope used in, as cure, Devon, 217

Hanover, see Lautenthal

Hantus, or spirits of Malay belief, 167

Hanuman and pariahs, 218

Hare, caught before St. George's Day, 255 ; ceremonial hunting of, 20-1 ; divination, used for, 244 ; eaten ceremonially, 259 ; head as gable ornament, Tirol, 322 : in Greek folktale, 117-9; human being as, 236 ; human shape assumed, Perthshire, 236 ; res- pected locally, 240 ; sacred, among Algonquins, 249 ; as substitute in witchcraft, 238 ; taken for luck, 255

Hare's nest, babies come from, 235

Ilartland, E. S., The Little Red Hen, 106 ; Presidential Address, 52-80 ; reviews by, Starr's American Indians, 206-7 5 Durk- heim's UAnnee Sociologique, 92-6 ; Archaeological Reports {Ontario), iSg8-g, 190- 1 ; Strack's Blut i/n Glauben und Aberglanben der Menschheit, 403 ; Eagle- hawk and Crow, a Study of the Australian Aborigines ar'c., 101-3 ; Chauvet's Folk-Lore Catalan : Legendes du Rotcssillon, 314-5 ; Madras Government Museum Bulletin, vol. iii., No. i, 398-9 ; Fison's Merry Suffolk, Master Archie, and other Tales, 204-6 ; Boas' Mythology of the Bella Coola Indians, 301 -4; Deniker's Races of Man, 206-7 ; Haas' Riigensche Skizzen, 202-3 : Teit and Boas' Thompson Indians of British Cobtmbia, 396-8 ; Crooke and Rouse's Talking Thrush ami other Tales from India, 3 1 5-6

Harvest customs and beliefs : {see also Corn-spirits) ; Hebrides, 441 ; Iceland, 292 ; Lippe, 260 ; Lithu- ania, 260 ; Malays, 306 ; Isle of Rtigen, 202 ; Scetersdal, Norway, 225