[6] Mariner, Tonga Islands, ii. 121-4.
[7] Schoolcraft, I. T., v. p. 155.
[8] Schoolcraft, I. T., iv. 496. See Dr. Brinton’s explanation of the story in his Myths of the New World, pp. 170-3.
[9] Humboldt, Personal Narrative, v. 595-7.
[10] Forbes Leslie, Early Races in Scotland, i. 177.
[11] Klemm, Cultur-Geschichte, ii. 155-7, where the beliefs are referred to. Franklin’s Second Journey, p. 308. They are so remarkable as to arouse suspicion that European influence has affected the native imagination; but the influence, if any, seems beyond the reach of criticism in this as in other striking cases of analogy.
[12] Schoolcraft, I. T., iv. 255.
[13] Hutton, Voyage to Africa, p. 320; and Bosman in Pinkerton, xvi. 396.
[14] Schoolcraft, iv. 90.
[15] Klemm, Cultur-Geschichte, vii. 368.