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 234, by no less than seven variants, as follows:—(1) Dr. Blind, in Archæological Review, iii. 24-7, “Ashpitell” (from neighbourhood of Glasgow). (2) A. Lang, in Revue Celtique, t. iii., reprinted in “Folk-Lore,” September, 1890, “Rashin Coatie” (from Morayshire). (3) Mr. Gregor, in Folk-Lore Journal, ii. 72-4 (from Aberdeenshire), “The Red Calf”—all these in Lowland Scots. (4) Campbell, Popular Tales, No. xliii. ii. 286 seq., “The Sharp Grey Sheep.” (5) Mr. Sinclair, in Celtic Mag., xiii. 454-65, “Snow-white Maiden.” (6) Mr. Macleod’s variant communicated through Mr. Nutt to Miss Cox’s volume, p. 533; and (7) Curtin, Myths of Ireland, pp. 78-92, “Fair, Brown, and Trembling” these four in Gaelic, the last in Erse. To these I would add (8, 9) Chambers’s two versions in ''Pop. Rhymes of Scotland'', pp. 66-8, “Rashie Coat,” though Miss Cox assimilates them to Type B.

ENGLISH VARIANTS OF CINDERELLA.