Index 



Kalev same in root as Achil- 

 leus and Latin aquila, 221. 



Kaleva or Kalev not used now 

 in Finland for "eagle," 216. 



Kaleva, the, xii; epic of the 

 Finns, quoted, 39; gave Long- 

 fellow impulse for " Hia- 

 watha," 59; on eagle and 

 cuckoo, 63, 64; cuckoos on 

 horse yokes, 66 ; shows that 

 Lapps were magicians for 

 Finns, 71 ; on fate of Aino, 

 126, 127; effects of Vaino's 

 harp, 142, 143. 



Kalevipoeg, hero, reputed son 

 of Kalev the eagle, real son 

 of Linda the bird, 73; parallel 

 of Siegfried, 74 ; a cuckoo god, 

 he dishonors his sister who 

 drowns herself, 75; takes his 

 reputed father's heritage by 

 beating his brothers, 96. 



Kalevipoeg, the, xii ; epic of the 

 Esths ; shows that Finns were 

 magicians for Esths, 71 ; 

 quoted for birds, 72 ; parallels 

 of metals and birds, 72. 



Kalypso, parallel of Venus in 

 Tannhauser legend, 40. 



Karagash, swan is ku in, 190. 



Karaku-tengu, crow-demons of 

 Japan born of egg, 46, 47, 204. 



Kemnitz in the Mark, swan 

 legend, 201. 



Kilgwri, the blackbird of, its 

 great age, 219. 



Kirke, meaning of her name, 

 "she-hawk," 164; daughter 

 of eagle, 164. 



Koibal, swan is ku in, 190. 



Kuknos, xii ; Esthonian kukene 

 "little moon," 189; king of 

 Ligurians, 193; a son of Mars 

 killed by llerakles, 194; a 

 son of Neptune strangled by 

 Achilleus, 195; legend of son 

 of this Kuknos, 195. 



Kullervo, the boy of gigantic 

 strength in the Kalevala ; 

 destroys in revenge the wife 

 of his master Ilmarinen, 49: 

 obscurity of his birth, 75, 76; 

 a cuckoo origin to his story, 

 77 ; his laziness, 84, 144. 



Kupselos, son of Eetion, set 

 afloat like Moses, 195 ; a son 

 of the eagle, 196. 



Kuveras, god of subterranean 

 wealth, 45. 



La Motte Fouqu6, Undine, 

 202. 



Lapland, home of wild swan, 

 190; home of singing swan, 

 190. 



Lapps, xiii; still use the conjur- 

 ing drum, 32 ; idols in shape 

 of birds, 172. 



Leda, her bird marriage, 164; 

 mother of Helen, Castor and 

 Pollux, 203; same as Linda 

 (bird) of the Kalevipoeg, 

 203 ; Zeus approaches her as 

 swan, 203 ; difference from 

 Linda, 207. 



Lemmetar, love goddess of 

 Finns, counterpart of Lem- 

 minkainen, 114. 



Lemminkainen, demi-god of the 

 Kalevala, a loose lover, 92; 



239 



