REFERENCES TO CERTAIN NOTEWORTHY INCIDENTS AND DETAILS 

 WHICH RECUR IN DIFFERENT TALES. 



If repeated in one and the same taie, or versions of it, thèse circumstances are uierely iudicated in the 

 first instance. The figures desiguate the nuuibers of the taies. 



1 Sandbanks and Islands are formed in a river out of variOus refuse (which the people 

 hâve thrown into the water, etc.), 1, 2 B, 121. 



2 A child is left in charge of some person or other during the absence of the parents; 

 an accident happens to the child, 2, 135, 476, 484, 487, 491. 



^ The eyes of an animal or being turn red in anger, 2, 57, 171. 



* A garden has been created in a miraculous way without the people knovving; the rustling 

 of the leaves in the wind astonishes the people upon hearing it for the first time, 2 A, 43, 44. 



^ In the absence oi the people some incident or other takes place which nobody is supposed 

 to know an3'thing about;' a cripple (or some old woman, etc), who has not gone with the rest, 

 nevertheless witnesses the event and informs the people, 5, 21 B, 22, 24, 25, 47, 57 J, 61, 141, 

 147, 252, 287, 353, 479. 



* Certain marks have been inflicted upon a person's body; on some låter occasion thèse 

 marks serve as means of identification, 6, 223. 



■^ Children, trees, etc, grow up with extraordinary rapidity; women bear children after a 

 very short period of pregnancy, etc, 2 A, 9, 15 C, 21, 34, 102, 263, 370, 459. 



^People are troubled by mosquitoes; they are obliged to move to another place, 11, 17, 19. 



^ Young boys who begin to shoot game take the spoil procured to their parents in order 

 to be instructed as to which is edible and which unfit for food, 14, 21, 321, 369 C, 459 A. 



1" People live, or are hidden in trees or underneath the ground; some other person happens 

 to come along and finding signs of the former he searches for them and at last discovers their 

 whereabouts, 14, 15, 43, 59, 273, 291, 293. 



" A man and his children are far away from their native place; when thinking of his home 

 the father sheds tears; the children see it and find out that they do not belong to the place where 

 they are staying with their father, 15, 62, 111, 463. 



Tom. XLVII. 



