IX 



Page 



448. The Tree Man and Sea Snake who used to visit each other . . . 480 



449. Fhe Banana Trees wlio vvailed in the Ahandoned Garden .... 480 



450. How Trees came to grovv in Kivvai 481 



XIX. TALES OF THE HEAVENLY BODIES (4:>l-4r)5) 48:^ 



451 — 451'. Tiie Stars 482 



453—454. Taies of the Moon (Ganumi) . . . .■ 484 



455. The Wanderings of the Sun (Hivvio), Moon (Ganumi), and Dai-|<ness (Duo) 480 



XX. MISCELLANEOUS TALES (4,5(i-498) 492 



A. Narratives about People (456—457) 492 



456 — 457. Hawia, the White Héron, Poniponi, the Beautiful Girl, and her Suitors 492 



The Disguised boy with Sores (4561, p. 4'>2. The Dance l'or Poniponi 

 (457), p. 496. 

 '458. How the Girl with Sores was badly treated by her Sisters with the 



Exception of the Youngest of them 501 



459. Tiburi who married the Girl in the Swamp, and their Son vyho killed 



the Wild Pig 501 



460. The Brother and Sister. and the Wild Pig, Hawk, and Crocodile . . .504 



461. The Brother and Sister and the Two Wild Birds 504 



4'^2. Tubo of Masingara who was carried to a Heef on the Top of a Bend- 



ing Tree 505 



463. The Man and Woman who drifted in a Canoë from Mawata to Yarubo 



and were brought back by Two Birds 507 



464. Javagi who swam under Water between Buru and Mabuiag, and his 



Daughters who were found by a Man 508 



465. Pairio who treated his old P'ather badly, and his Punishment through 



Amurabari 511 



460. Badabada, the \'oung Hero 512 



467. Agiwai who gave away another Man's Stone Axe 514 



468. The Boy who cried after Seeing a Girl Nude- and was sent away 



with her . . . '. 515 



469 — 470. Children who were born after their Mother's Death 518 



471. The Man who pretended to hâve been in a Fight and was pursued 



by an evil Being 519 



472. How Two Men were turned into Animais 520 



473. The Quarrel over the Broken Croton at lasa 522 



474 — 476. The People who suffered from Thirst • . . 522 



477. Ignorant Odjo who was instructed by Bero 524 



B. Social Practice (478-492) 525 



478. The Punishment of the Hunter who did not share the Pigs killed by 



him with the People but ate them himself 525 



479. The Punishment of the Boy who was sent with F'ood to another 



Person and ate it himself 526 



480. The Lonely Man who was induced to come and live with the People 527 



481. The Captured Thief who bought himself Free by giving up his Wife, 



and how his Capturer was bitten by a Snake 527 



482. The Thief Woman and her Innocent V'ictim 528 



483—484. The Kesponsibility for Accidentai Deaths 529 



485. Murder and Revenge 530 



N:o 1. 



