[152.] The recessional movement appears in The Song of a Wolf in Miss Densmore’s Teton-Sioux Music, p. 190. Bulletin 61. Bur. of Amer. Eth. Washington. 1918.
[154.] Moulton, Richard G. Literary Introductions: Modern Readers’ Bible, pp. 1457-1458.
[160-1.] Matthews, Washington. (1) The Night Chant, pp. 282-283. (2) Navaho Legends, p. 269.
[161.] Matthews, Washington. (3) The Night Chant, pp. 294-295.
(4) Ibid., pp. 279-280.
[162.] Curtis, Natalie. The Indians’ Book, p. 10.
[163.] Cushing, Frank. Zuñi Folk Tales, p. 255.
[164.] Mr. John P. Harrington is one of the few investigators who have taken account of the use of pitch in an Indian language. His discussion of this element in the Tewa speech may be found in his study of the Tiwa Language, Dialect of Taos, New Mexico, page 15. Papers of the School of American Archæology, number 14; also in American Anthropologist, volume 12, number 1. 1910.
[166.] See Dr. E. W. Scripture’s discussion of oral verse, Die Verskunst und die experimental Phonetik, Wiener Medizenische Wochenschrift, 1922.