[20] See chapter vii.
[21] See p. 47, note, above.
[22] P. 19.
[23] See Hippe, pp. 148 f.
[24] See note by Schott, p. 473, in which he gives evidence based on personal knowledge, and Grimm, Geschichte der deutschen Sprache, p. 92. I have touched on the matter in Engl. Stud. xxxvi. 195–201.
[25] This trait is found not infrequently in other settings. See, for example, Vernaleken, Oesterreichische Kinder- und Hausmärchen, p. 141.
[26] This trait recalls Puss in Boots, which is otherwise compounded with The Grateful Dead. See preceding chapter, p. 42, and p. 70 below.
[27] See chapter vii.
[28] Kennedy says, p. 38: “In some versions of ‘Jack the Master,’ etc., Jack the servant is the spirit of the dead man.”
[29] Chapter vi.