by Edwin Sidney Hartland
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[224] Ellis, p. 208; Grinnell, p. 129.
[225] ?Choice Notes,? p. 96; cf. Jahn, p. 364, cited above, p. 279. (Kennedy relates the story of the Lady of Inchiquin differently. According to him the husband was never to invite company to the castle. This is probably more modern than the other version. Kennedy, p. 282.) Keightley, p. 458, quoting the Quarterly Review, vol. xxii. Sir Francis Palgrave, though an accurate writer, was guilty of the unpardonable sin of invariably neglecting to give his authorities. Ibid. p. 485, quoting Mdlle. Bosquet, ?La Normandie Romanesque.?
[226] ?Journal Amer. F. L.? vol ii. p. 137; vol. i. p. 76; Schneller, p. 210; ?Rosenöl,? vol. i. p. 162; Child, vol. i. p. 337, quoting Schmidt and Apollodorus; ?Panjab N. & Q.,? vol. ii. p. 207. (In this form the story is found as a tradition, probably derived from the Mahábhárata.) ?Trans. Aberd. Eistedd.? p. 225; White, vol. i. p. 126.
[227] Dennys, p. 140; ?Corpus Poet. Bor.? vol. i. p. 168; ?Kathá-sarit-ságara,? vol. ii. p. 453, cf. p. 577; White, vol. i. p. 88; Schneller, p. 210; Robertson Smith, p. 50.
[228] Gill, p. 265.
[229] ?Indian N. & Q.? vol. iv. p. 147.
[230] ?Sacred Books of the East,? vol. xxvii. pp. 471, 475, 476; ?Indian N. & Q.? vol. iv. p. 147.
[231] Romilly, p. 134; Landes, p. 123.
[232] Bent, p. 13. The Nereids in modern Greek folklore are conceived in all points as Swan-maidens. They fly through the air by means of magical raiment (Schmidt, p. 133).
[233] See my article on the ?Meddygon Myddfai,? entitled ?Old Welsh Folk Medicine,? ?Y Cymmrodor,? vol. ix. p. 227.
[234] A certain German family used to excuse its faults by attributing them to a sea-fay who was reckoned among its ancestors; Birlinger, ?Aus Schwaben,? vol. i. p. 7, quoting the ?Zimmerische Chronik.?
[235] Namely, her husband's father, whose name she was not permitted by etiquette to utter. See above, p. 309.
[236] Theal, p. 54. The Teton lady who became a mermaid was summoned, by singing an incantation, to suckle her child; ?Journal Amer. F. L.? vol. ii. p. 137.
[237] Schreck, p. 71.
[238] Poestion, p. 55; ?Cymru Fu,? p. 474.