index.
519
Halga, Halfdan's son, story of, 454
Ilaltia, the, of the Finns, 328
Hand-clapping, India, 405
Handley Down, excavations on, 89, 90
Hill do., ib.
Hare, the, in African folklore, 222, 283, 290, 292; Dorsetshire do., witch form of, 48S; demon taking form of, 262 ; in Irish folklore, 362
Milk, Denmark, 460
Hartjesdag observances, Haarlem, 246
Hartland, E. S., Australian Gods : Rejoinder, 46 ; Superstition regard- ing Women, 365 ; reviews by, Alcover's Aplech de Rondaves Mal- lorqiiines, 243 ; Bye-gottes relating to Wales and the Border Cotatties, 350; Clodd's Tom-Tit-Tot, 334; Gomme's Traditional Games of Englaftd, Scotland and Ireland, 336 ; Hofler's Dcutsches Krank- hcitsnanten Buck, 476 ; Junot's Les Baronga, 225 ; Kingsley's West African Studies, 447 ; Lang's Alytk,- Ritual and Religion, 346 ; Parker's Alore Austi-alian Legend- ary Tales, 231 ; Pitt-Rivers' Exca- vations in Cranborne Chase, 87 ; Rua's Tra Antiche Fiabe e Novclle, 102 ; Scbillot's Legcndes Locales de la Haute Bretagne, and Veillee de Noel, 458 ; Spencer and Gillen's Native Tribes of Central Australia, 233 ; Thiselton Dyer's Old English Social Life as told by the Parish Registers, 475 ; services of, to the Folklore Society, 66
Harvey, F. O., More Notes from Cyprus, 365
Hawk the, little hawk as totem, 237 ; tortoise-eater hawk, Cos, 182
Hayato the, Imperial Guards, Japan, 312-3
Hazel switches for the cattle, Ger- many, 180, twigs of, in water- finding, 479
Head, the, in Indian folklore, 440
Headache &c., prevention of, 154
Head Hunters, 229
"Heads and Harps" in the Hebrides, 268
Health of expectant father, loi
Heart of bewitched cows tuck with pins and burnt, 483-5
Heart of lover caused to be eaten by
unchaste wife, Indian folktales, 442 Heaven in Baronga idea, 226-7 Hebrides, the Outer, The Powers of
Evil in, by Miss A. Goodrich-
Freer, 259 Hedgehogs, grateful, Indian folktales,
416, teased by Indian children,
439
Heidelberg, driving out Winter as a straw man, 178 ; Pelzenichel cus- toms at, 180
Heifers and Oxen, Armenian tale, 470
Heir, female preferred in China, 229
to throne, ceremony of declaring,
Indian folktales, 438
Hel Well, Cerne, 479
Helgi Hundingsbane, story of, 454
Helgi-lays, the, Bugge's theory con- cerning, 452
Hell, Ilebridean euphemism for, 265
Hellenic myth, Babylonian origin of, 340
Hemp in charm-rope, 487
Hen, crowing, ill-omened, 181-2 ; The Little Red Hen, Irish tale, 116, 361 ; sacrifice of, in founda- tions of house, 118
Heraldry, white bulls and others in,
357 Hercules, two parallels, 230 Herefordshire folklore, A Crown of
Thorns, 489 Hero, the, in Panjab folktales, 390-1 Heroines, in do., 422 et sqq. Ilervey Islands, wind-holes and wind- raising in, 250 Hiccough, Indian folklore, 435 High gods, Australia, undying, 492 Hiisi, Innnish tree-god, turned into a
devil, 329 Hippopotamus, as minder of deserted
children, S. Africa, 224 Hir, Indian story of, 428 Hira the deer, revenge of, Indian
folklore, 416 Historic method in folklore, 147 Hobamock, N. American Indian
snake-god, 21 HobJjy Horse Dance, Staffordshire
and Wiltshire, 1 86 Hobgoblins, 360 Ilohodcmi, Japanese divinity, story
of, 311 . . . Iloho no ninigi, Japanese divinity, 310