Flute, The magic, [251]
Folk-lore, Problems, [1];
haphazard comparisons, [12];
analogy with comparative philology, [14], [16];
its investigation, [14];
survivals, [9], [12], [15], [16], [36];
concentric investigation, [19];
written and oral, [20];
a product of peaceful times, [24];
Western European, [54];
of the nearer East, [55];
and the “man of science,” [55];
and education, [55];
and the heresy hunter, [56]
Foot, Origin of instep, [215];
why it is arched, [217]
Foreign elements in languages, [17] et seq.
Fox, The, the “clever” outwitted, [22];
fox fables in Jewish literature, [28];
the partridge and the hound, [290];
becomes monk, [313];
seven-witted, [320];
and the hedgehog, [322], [323];
and the leopard, [331];
the vixen and the tom cat, [332];
not among the creatures of the sea, [365];
beguiles the fishes about his heart, [367]
France, The Goths in, [41]
French Reynard cycle, [33]
Frere, Mary, [28]
Friars, The mendicant, [41]
Frog, The, and the Lady Mary, [190];
King Log and King Stork, [304];
and the hare, [314]