[9] ix. 32.
[10] See pp. 26 f.
[11] Ed. Bartsch, xviii. st. 910 and 911.
[12] P. 27.
[13] P. 28.
[14] Traditions et superstitions de la Haute-Bretagne, 1882, i. 238 f.
[15] MacCulloch, Guernsey Folk Lore, 1903, pp. 283 f.
[16] See W. Crooke in Folk-Lore, xiii. 280–283.
[17] Book iii. w. 4726 ff. of the whole poem (2nd ed. J. Small, 1883, E. E. T. S. orig. ser. 11, p. 153).
[18] Annamite is an exception, but it cannot be regarded as having any organic connection with the cycle.