Footnote 376:[(return)]

See p. [224], infra.

Footnote 377:[(return)]

Guest, iii. 255; Morris, Celtic Remains, 231.

Footnote 378:[(return)]

HL 283 f. See also Grimm, Teut. Myth. i. 131.

Footnote 379:[(return)]

Loth, i. 240.

Footnote 380:[(return)]

Stokes, US 34.

Footnote 381:[(return)]

Myvyrian Archæol. i. 168; Skene, i. 275, 278 f.; Loth, ii. 259.

Footnote 382:[(return)]

See my Childhood of Fiction, 127. Llew's vulnerability does not depend on the discovery of his separable soul, as is usual. The earliest form of this Märchen is the Egyptian story of the Two Brothers, and that of Samson and Delilah is another old form of it.

Footnote 383:[(return)]

Skene, i. 314, ii. 342.

Footnote 384:[(return)]

HL 408; RC x. 490.

Footnote 385:[(return)]

HL 237, 319, 398, 408.