[10.1] Suprà, vol. i. p. 65.

[11.1] Dasent, Fjeld, 261, from Asbjörnsen. The story is defective.

[11.2] Edwards, Bahama, 90. This story likewise is the worse for wear.

[12.1] Romero, 129 (Story No. 38).

[14.1] Burton, iv. Suppl. Nights, 258.

[14.2] Burton, iv. Suppl. Nights, 244, cited suprà, vol. i. p. 54.

[15.1] Douglas, 58.

[16.1] Von Wlislocki, Volksdicht., 323 (Story No. 55). In savage tales the attack on a monster from the inside is not very uncommon. See, for example, Riggs, Dakota Grammar, 91, 141; Edwards, Bahama, 72. The Quères Pueblos relate that the Coyote swallowed the Horned Toad. After being swallowed, the latter erected its spines, and so killed the Coyote. Lummis, 86. Cf. the story of the Lambton Worm (Henderson, 288), the tale from Galloway given by Mr. Andrew Lang in the Academy, October 1885, the classic Saga of Kleostratos (infra, [p. 37]), and others.

[18.1] Schleicher, 54. Compare a tale from Oldenburg, ii. Strackerjan, 333 (variant of Story No. 630).

[18.2] Pitrè, Toscane, 9 (Story No. 2); F.L. Andaluz, 357; Romero, 83 (Story No. 23).