[79.1] Capt. R. C. Temple, in iv. F.L. Journal, 282.

[79.2] Burton, iii. Suppl. Nights, 270.

[79.3] Ibid. iv. 298.

[79.4] Gibb, 163.

[80.1] iii. Bahar Danush, 80.

[80.2] Rivière, 231, 225.

[80.3] iv. Folklore, 285.

[81.1] Braga, i. Contos, 42. Two instances in Europe where the magical food is to be eaten by the husband occur in Gipsy tales. In one from southern Hungary, a woman who wished for a daughter gave her husband at full moon the egg of a black hen to eat, with the best result. Von Wlislocki, Volksdicht. 314. This is in accordance with a practice referred to in Chapter VI., infra. In the other tale, which is from Transylvania, the wife goes out at midnight and collects herbs and bones. She cooks them at home, gives her husband to eat, and thereupon, becoming pregnant, she bears a son in the form of a kid. Von Wlislocki, Märchen, 119.

[81.2] i. Finamore, pt. i., 88.

[81.3] ii. Von Hahn, 33, 197.