[189.2] Wratislaw, 138 (Story No. 23), from Afanasief.
[190.1] Legrand, 107, from Sakellarios.
[190.2] i. Von Hahn, 268.
[191.1] ii. Pentamerone, 231 (Story No. 59).
[191.2] Frere, 79 (Story No. 6).
[191.3] Stokes, 138 (Story No. 21).
[192.1] Landes, Tjames, 79 (Story No. 10). It is abstracted in Miss Cox’s Cinderella, 299.
[193.1] A large number of these stories has been abstracted and commented on by M. Eugène Monseur, i. Bulletin de F.L., 89, to whose accurate and scholarly paper the reader is referred. See also Grimm, ii. Tales, 538; Countess Martinengo-Cesaresco, 9; Ellis, Yoruba, 134.
[194.1] i. Child, 118.
[195.1] Campbell, Santal F.T., 52, 106, 102. In a Basuto tale a mother, irritated by her daughter, commits a deadly assault upon her, and beats her body to dust. The wind of the desert carries the dust away to a lake, where a crocodile makes of it a woman to live with him in the lake. From time to time she comes up to the surface and calls to her sister, chanting the story of her wrongs. Casalis, 360.