Index 



Fenians of Ireland parallels of 

 Pans, Panisci and Fauni, 128. 



Fiach, Irish for raven, 42. 



Finn mac Cool, modern Irish 

 form of Pan, Vaino, Faunus, 

 etc., 132. 



Finns, the,xiii; Russian subjects, 

 live on Baltic, 70 ; with Esths 

 worshipped owl gods, 173. 



Fion of Ireland, xvi; regarded 

 as historical person, 91 ; dives 

 into lake and comes up an 

 aged man, 115; rescues Oisin 

 from fairies, 116, 144. 



Firboigs, old subject race of 

 Ireland ; fly to Ulster and re- 

 turn to Connaught, 114; give 

 name to pawns in chess, 114. 



Florence, 170, 208. 



Florida, egret extirpated from, 



23- 

 Fomori, fog and undersea giants 



of Irish legend, 202. 

 Fylfot; origin of swastika, 165. 



Garuda, Indian bird like Si- 

 murg and legendary eagles, 

 214. 



Gauche, French, "left hand," 

 "sinister" from Teutonic name 

 for cuckoo, 79. 



Gawk and gowk, Gauch, gok, 

 English, German, and Swed- 

 ish terms for cuckoo, 79. 



Giraldus Cambrensis on Eagle 

 of Snowdon, 219. 



Goll, a giant killed by Cuchul- 

 laind, 97. 



Graal, swan and knight of, recall 

 Apollo, 200. 



23 



Graiai, hoary at birth like cyg- 

 nets, 196; swans in shape, 

 one-eyed, Valkyrs, 196; their 

 terrible names, 197. 



Greece, analysis of myths r&. 

 quires belief in early non- 

 Aryans akin to Finnic races 

 who gave elements to Greek 

 mythology, 228. 



Goethe on cuckoo, 60. 



Goose-flesh, to feel; its origin 

 suggested, 192. 



Gorgons, watched by Graiai, 

 197, 208. 



Gubernatis, xiv, 45. 



Gwalchmei, Gawayneof Britain, 

 76 ; his name explained, 85. 



Gwemabwy, the eagle of, its 

 great age, 219. 



Harpies and Phoenix. 220. 



Harpy Tomb, 171. 



Helen, born of egg, 164; same 

 as Selene, moon, 203. 



Hera, peacock assigned to her, 

 6; seduced by Zeus, her 

 brother, under form of cuckoo, 

 68, 86 ; carries a cuckoo on 

 her sceptre. Sy, 108. 



Herakles kills Kuknos, son of 

 Mars, 194 ; burns himself free 

 of earth like eagle, 224. 



Herodotus, his story of doves 

 that founded the oracles of 

 Dodona and Jupiter Ammon, 

 10; ignorant of speaking 

 parrots and ravens, 11 ; in his 

 time everything derived from 

 Egyi^t, 12, 15; silence on 

 mysteries, 29. 



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