[730] Cf. Courtney, Miss M. E., Cornish Feasts and Folklore, p. 105.
[731] Wilson, J., Imperial Gazetteer, i., 1042.
[732] Rydberg, V., Teutonic Mythology, p. 361.
[733] Windle, Sir B. C. A., Life in Early Britain, p. 63.
[734] The cul of culver or culfre and columba was probably the Irish Kil: hence the umba of columba may be connoted with imp.
[735] Rig-Veda (mandala X, 90).
[736] Golden Legend, v., 235.
[737] Golden Legend, v., 236.
[738] Mykenae, p. 267.
[739] Stoughton, Dr. J., Golden Legends of the Olden Time, p. 9.