[100] Gr. My., ii. 318.
[101] Sonne, Mond und Sterne, pp. 213, 229.
[102] This proves that the tale belongs to the pre-Christian cannibal age.
[103] Turner’s Samoa, p. 102. In this tale only the names of the daughters are translated; they mean ‘white fish’ and ‘dark fish.’
[104] Folklore Journal, August, 1883.
[105] Schoolcraft, Algic Researches, ii. 94-104.
[106] The Red Indian version of the flight is given in ‘The Red Horse of the Dacotahs,’ Century Magazine, 1884.
[107] Nature, March 14, 1884.