118 



husband, the whale, built a boat of immense swiftness, so as to be 

 a match to a flying bird, even able to outdo a gull (5). 



A girl taken by an eagle, who carried her as his bride to the 

 top of à steep cliff (8). 



A man mated himself with a seafowl. He saw many ivoinen 

 bathing in a lake and secured the clothes of one among them, 

 whereupon the others changed into birds and flew away (1:2). 



A girl married an ,,atliarusek" (underworld people). His boat 

 was able to dive and continue its course beneath the waves of the 

 sea (20). 



The lost daughter found by her brothers as married >vith я 

 monstrous reptile (21). 



The inlanders in dancing transformed themselves into animals (28). 



The sun and moon originally sister and brother (35). 



Training wild animals for pulling a sledge (37). 



Kayakers in captivity with the underMorld-people (46, 65). 



A woman mated with a dog. Origin of the Inlanders and the 

 White men (148). 



Origin of seals and whales from the daughter of a mighty 

 angakok , who threw her in the sea , in order to save himself (see 

 Voll, p. 17). 



An angakok-flight in order to restore the health to a child by 

 fetching back its spirit, which was taken by the inlanders (44). 



Giviok crossed the sea in his kayak for Akilinek; he passed 

 the ,, sea-lice" , which devoured his throwing-stick , and a narrow 

 passage between two icebergs, opening and closing. Game to canni- 

 bals (15). 



An angakok and his brothers in law drifting upon ice to Aki- 

 linek and afterwards back again. Taking the sliape of a bear and 

 assisted by amulets (16, 23). 



A man coming from Akilinek In a sledge pulled by reindeers (37). 



Angakok-flight to Akilinek; an iceberg turned over and crushed 

 a ,,kagse" (public building) with its assembly (45). 



Travehers to Akilinek give their boat a double coating (82). 



A boy fled to Akilinek in a kayak. The giant-people and the 

 monstrous gulls (84). 



Expedition to the inlanders for the purpose af procuring metal 

 knives. — A man descended both from the coast people and the 

 inlanders, his great deeds. — Onslaught on the coast people. — 

 See also Vol.1, p. 16 — 21. 



