402 



Habitations and dress 539 



The house 539 



Clothing, dressing of the hair, and tattooing 554 



Social and religious life ' 561 



Domestic occupations and amusements 561 



Visiting 574 



Social customs in summer 576 



Social order and laws 578 



Religious ideas and the angakunirn (priesthood) 583 



Sedna and the fulmar 583 



The tornait and the angakut 591 



The flight to the moon 598 



Kadlu the thunderer 600 



Feasts, religious and secular. . . ; 600 



Customs and regulations concerning birth, sickness, and death 609 



Tales and traditions 615 



Ititaujang 615 



The emigration of the Sagdlirmiut 618 



Kalopaling .- 630 



The Uissuit 621 



Kiviung 631 



Origin of the narwhal 635 



The visitor 627 



The fugitive women 638 



Qaudjaqdjuq 638 



I. Story of the three brothers 628 



II. Qaudjaqdjuq 630 



Igimarasugdjuqdjuaq the cannibal 633 



The Tornit 634 



The woman and the spirit of the singing house 636 



The constellation Udleqdjim 636 



Origin of the Adlet and of the Qadlunait 637 



The great flood 637 



Inugpaqdjuqdjualung 638 



The bear story 638 



Sundry tales 639 



The owl and the raven 641 



Comparison between Bafl&n Land traditions and those of other tribes 641 



Science and the arts 643 



Geography and navigation 643 



Poetry and music 648 



Meri-ymaking among the Tornit 649 



The lemming's song 649 



Arlum pissinga (the killer's song) 650 



I. Summer song 653 



II. The retiu-ning hunter 653 



III. Song (jf the Tornit 653 



IV. Song of the Inuit traveling to Nettilling 653 



V. 0;t;aitoq's song 654 



VI. Utitiaq's song 654 



VII. Song 654 



VIII. Song 654 



IX. Song of the Tornit 654 



