620 PROGRESS OP ANTHROPOLOGY IN 1889. 



The followiug- sectious are planned : 



Comparative mythology. Celtic and Teutonic niytii and saga. In- 

 stitutions : {a) archaic, (h) savage. Folk-lore in its more restricted use: 

 {a) folk-tales and cognate subjects, {h) ballads and games, (c) folk-usages. 

 Prehistoric anthroi)ology and archaic history. Oriental andmediseval 

 romantic literature. (4) Tabulation of folk-tales and analysis of cus- 

 toms and superstitions. 



The impracticability of separating the study of comparative religion 

 from folk-lore at present is seen in the titles given below, while in the 

 common affairs of life no less than in the conduct of the gods the sav- 

 age and the untutored mind live much in presence of a spirit world. 



The most important of these jDublications are the following : 



Amulets against evil eye, Tylor. Arab amulets, Pallary. Arab le- 

 gend, Bolton. Aryan sun-myths, Morris. Ballads of London, Babcock. 

 Bavarian folk-moot in sickness, Hofler (three papers). Blackfoot sun- 

 dance, McLean. Bread-lore, Gregor. Budha's alms dish and the Holy 

 Grail, Nutt. Celtic axes as amulets, Corot. Celtic myth, Nutt. Chero- 

 kee legends. Ten Kate. Cherokee plant-lore, Mooney. Comparative 

 mythology, White. Cosmogony of the Mojave Indians, Bourke. Count- 

 ing out rhymes, Indian, Matthews. Cross, svastika, etc., in America, 

 Brinton. Death's messengers, Morris. Devil and witch stories, Gregor. 

 Egyptian " Ka " (spiritual body), Edwards. English folktales in Amer- 

 ica, weather-lore, and current superstitions, Bergen and JS^ewell. Fairy 

 stories, Colardeau, Folk-lore, African (the story of creation), Clodd. 

 Folk-lore of Bahama negroes, Edwards. Folk-lore, Burmese, St. John. 

 Folk-lore, Cairene, Sayce. Folk-lore of Corea, Allen. Folk-lore, Euro- 

 pean, in the United States, Curtin. Folk-lore, German, White and Allen. 

 Folk-lore, Huron, Hale. Folk-lore, Irish, White and Allen. Folk-lore, 

 Magyar, Katona. Folk-lore, Mexican, Janvier. Folk-lore, iSTew Eng- 

 land, Currier. Folk-lore, 'New Hebrides, Codrington. Folklore, Ojib- 

 wa, Hoffman. Folk-lore, Omaha, Dorsey. Folk-lore, Omaha, Fletcher. 

 Folk-lore, Oriental, White and Allen. Folk-lore, Pennsylvania Germans, 

 Hoffman. Folk-lore, Scottish, White and Allen. Folk-lore, Scottish, 

 Gregor. Folktales, Slavonic, Wratislau. Folk-lore, Teton, Dorsey. 

 Folk-lore, Wexford, A. S. G. Folk-lore legends. White and Allen. Folk- 

 lore, sub voce. Folk-medicine of Pennsylvania Germans, Hoffman. 

 Gambling songs, Navajo, Matthews. Gezidees or devil worshippers, 

 Brouski. Harvest customs, Frazer. House that Jack built, Brewster. 

 Human sacrifices in Babylonia, Ward. Ireland, holiday customs in, 

 Mooney. Irish proverbs, Kiunahan. Kelpie stories, Gregor. Lama 

 pantheon. Pander. Legends of Annam and Tonkin. The lizard in the 

 ethnology of Oceanica, Giglioli. Louisiana nursery tales, Fortier. Mo- 

 hawk legend. Chamberlain. Masks, New Guinea, Meyer. Myths and 

 efBgy mounds, Peet. Myth of the robin red breast, Fletcher. New fire 

 among the Iroquois, Hewitt. Prehistory and Christian belief, Nada- 

 iliac. Priestly function among the lower races, Bastian. Plume sticks, 



