Page:Folk-lore - A Quarterly Review. Volume 7, 1896.djvu/464

 426

Index,

315, 406, 410, anmal and other, 204-205, 212, 314, 408 ; scape- buft'alo, 315; scape-goat, 206, 41 1 ; Shah Daula's Rats. 315; substi- tutes for travellers, 410 ; sun- worship, 314 ; taboos, 205, 207- 208, 314, 407, 411 ; trees and tree-worship, 93, 205-207, 213, 314-315, 406-407 ; water and rain superstitions, 95, 206-207,315-316, 406-407, 410; witchcraft, 92, 317, 409

Indian Folktales, by Susette M. Taylor, 82-88. We must not trust Appearances, 83 ; The Bold Baby, 84 ; Servan, 84 ; Rescue of Sita, 85 ; Jackal and the Crocodile, 87 ; Bottle-bird and the jMonkey, 88 ; Sparrow and Crow, 88; Banker and his Servant, 94 ; Shaikh Chilli, 94 ; Wicked Step-mother, 94 ; Clever wife of the Wazir, 94 ; Rabbit and the Monkey, 94 ; Virtue of Raja Rupa Angad, 208 ; INIetamorphosis of Raja Vikrama- ditya, 208 ; Magic Boat, 209 ; Boy and Halter, 209 ; Fruit of Youth, 210; Devoted Lover, 210; Grateful Beasts, 210 ; Discarded Princess, 210 ; Fairy Wife, 210 ; Other tales, 211, 212; Mahadeva and Parvati, 316 ; Snake King, the, 316 ; Other tales, 316 : Prince and Snake, 408 ; Prince Nilkanth, 409 ; Angel of Death, 409 ; Luck of the Youngest Son, 409; Cow of Plenty, 410; Wife's Riddle, 411; Women rule the World, 411 ; some parallels to, by L. Goldmerstein, 199

Infantile Hernia, see Hartland

Innismurray, the cursing stones of, 68

Introduction to Folklore, An, by Marion Roalfe Cox, reviewed, 70

Iranic Eschatology, 190

Ireland, folklore of; Birth customs, 179, 300; Celtic Doctrine of Re- l)irth, 184- 191 ; Condla, story of, 185 ; Cuchulinn's Sick-bed, 186 ; Fairy lore, 299, 300, 323 ; Festival, St. Martin's Day, 178, 179; Giants, 162, 323-328 ; Hallow-Eve prac- tices, 300 : Irish beliefs in the Happy Other- world, 184 ; Lae- gaire, tale of, 186 ; Leitrim folk- and fairy-tales, 161, 321 ;iLuck

and Unluck, 299 ; Marriage cus- toms, 180, 182 ; May Day super- stitions, 178, 182 ; Medicinal lore, 181, 182, 299; Mongan, tales of, 185 ; Oisin and Caoilte, tales of, 185 ; Shoe-throwing, 81 ; Sunday football, 347 ; Various tales of the Other- world, 186, 187 ; Voyage of Bran, son of Febal, to the Land of the Li\-ing, 185 ; Will of the Wisp, how to dismiss, 300 ; Witch- craft in, 177, 178, 182 ; Wooing of Etain, 186 Iron, magic virtue of (India), 207 Italy, folklore of ; Charms, Nea- poHtan, 350 ; Dying for Christ in the Abruzzi, 282 ; Funeral masks in Sicily, 350, and on the con- tinent, 357 ; Legends of Florence, 396 ; Passion Play in Castelnuovo, Canavese, 197, 198

Jackal, The, and the Crocodile,

Indian folktale, 87 Jacobs (Joseph), reviews by, Les

Fabliaux (Bedier) 59 ; The Jdtaka,

68 Japan, Chronicles of, 387 Japanese idea of the Under-world,

188 Jdtaka, The, or Stories of Buddha's former Births, vol. i., translated

from the Pali, by R. Chalmers,

edited by Prof. E. B. Cowell,

reviewed by Joseph Jacobs, 68 Jewish mysticism, origin of, 203 Jones (Bryan J.), Shoe-throwing, 81

Kabbala, The Jewish, its antiquity,

202 Kali-Kantchari, Lesbian Epiphany

ghost, 146 Kempe, William, his Nine Dates

IVonder, 82 Kent, Survival of Odin-worship in,

298 Ketty Cassidy, of Aughrim, 170 King's Evil, Charming for, 270, 295,

296

Laegaire, tale of, 186

Lancashire, first-foot, 90

Land of Women, The, 185, 186,

188, 315 Lang (Andrew), Obituary of Prof.

Child, 416