Page:The Folk-Lore Journal Volume 1 1883.djvu/192

184 Panjâbî. Kângrâ Hills.

From jûîn, a louse, is a girl's proper name Jûn or Jûîn; and from lîkh, a nit, comes Lîkho, a girl's name! The process of extracting lice and nits from the hair can be seen in any Indian village any day from Peshâwar to Cape Comorin.

HE following tale was written down by Patrick Myers at the dictation of his father, John Myers, native of Kilfinnan, co. Limerick. Mr. Myers has many stories, but says that the stories they told when he was a young man wouldn't be fit to be written down. It may be remembered that Mr. Patrick Kennedy gives a similar account of some of the folk-tales of co. Wexford: and I have a suspicion that the story now given has been somewhat polished up by the writer. Its interest as a folk-tale lies partly in the corroboration which it gives to and receives from one of Crofton Croker's stories. In that writer's Killarney Legends, pp. 80-83, will be found a legend resembling this in all the main features. It is there associated with Mucruss Abbey, and the parts of Pat and the beggarman are taken by two monks. I strongly suspect that the setting, the localisation, and the dramatis personæ are Mr. Croker's own; there are certain