Page:Folk-lore - A Quarterly Review. Volume 1, 1890.djvu/575

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TABULATION OF FOLKTALES. 127

Hearth- Cat" ; No. xxiv, "The Maiden and the Fish." Sagas from the Far East, p. 180; Schleicher, p. 10 ; Schueller, No. 24. Schott, Wala- chische Marchen, 100-105, "Die Kaisertochter Gansehirtin." Sebillot, Contespop.de la Haute Bretagne, p. 15 ; Shriek, No. ix, " The Wonderful Birch". Sodewa Bai. Taylor, Gammer Grethel ; or German Fairy Tales, etc., p. 332 (Welsh version). Thorpe, Yule Tide Stories, p. 112, "The Little Goldshoe" ; p. 375, "The Girl clad in Mouseskin." Vernaleken In the Land of Marvels, p. 182. Vuk Karajich, No. 32. Winther, Danske Folkeeventyr, pp. 12-17, "De to Kongedottre." Woycicki, Pol- nische Volkssagen und Marchen, " Die Eiche und der Schaafpelz." Wratis- law, Sixty Folk- tales (Slavonic) p. 181, "Cinderella." Zingerle, No. 16. For inc. 1, see Grimm, Teut. Myth., 1229, 1693. Ralston, -R. F. T. t

p. 159. For inc. 2, see Tabulator's remarks in No. 14, ante, p. 37, and cf,

Vernaleken, p. 161, " Moriandle and Sugarkandle." For inc. 3, cf. F. L. Journal, ii., 241.

For incs. 4, 8, 12, 15, see Grimm, Teut. Myth., 872. Gypsy-Lwe Journal, i, 84, "Tale of a Foolish Brother and of a Wonderful Bush." Children's Legends, No. 10, " The Hazel Branch." See also Theal, Kaffir Folk-lore, " The Wonderful Horns." For wishing- trees, cf. Dasent, Norse Tales, liv, and pp. 420, 433. Comp. the wishing-tree which bears clothes, etc,, and wine, in Megaduta (ed. Schiitz, pp. 25-7). For speaking -trees, cf. Callaway, Z. T., p. 188 ; Dasent, pp. 113, 428, 440 ; Day, Folk-tales of Bengal, p. 281 ; Stokes, Ind. Fairy Tales, p. 202; Theal, Kaffir Folk-lore, p. 50 (trees which laugh); Thorpe, T. T. Stories, pp. 17, 43, 99, 369, 429 ; Wide-Awake Stories, 179-80, 181-3. Comp. Hiawatha's appeal to forest-trees, and green reed's address to Psyche (Apuleius). See also Grimm, Teut. Myth., 1202, note. For other magical trees, cf. Callaway, Z. T., pp. 51, 218 ; Campbell, i, 236, 237 ; Grey, Polyn. Myth., 111-14 ; Tylor, Early Hist., p. 356.

For incs. 6, 7 (Tasks), see Tabulator's remarks in No. 19, ante., pp. 56, 57, and cf. Busk, F. L. Home, No. 5. F. L. Journal, i, 320 ff.; ii, 13 ff. Geldart, F. L. Mod. Greece, p. 44, "The Snake, the Dog, and the Cat." Gubernatis, i, p. 38. Hahn, No. 37, and ii, 243. Magyar Folk-tales, F. L. Soc., pp. 18, 153, 192 (millet cleaning), 208. Pentamerone, "The Dove." Satuja ja Tarinoita, i, "The Wonderful Birch." Stokes, Ind. Fairy Tales, p. 180. Vernaleken, In the Land of Man-els, pp. 214, 220 ff, 227, 277 ff, 290 ff, 353-4, 359. Wolf, p. 138.

For helpful animals, see Tabulator's remarks in No. 17, ante, p. 46-7 ; and see F. L. Journal, i, 236, " Folk-tales of the Malagasy." Magyar Tales, p. 207.

For inc. 17 (recognition by means of shoe), cf. ^Eliani Varice Histories, xiii, cap. 32 (Rhodope and Psammeticus). F. L. Journal, i, 55, Irish Folk-tale (hero's glass shoe picked up by princess) ; and Riviere, Contes pop, Kabyles, p. 196.