<SPAN name="startofbook"></SPAN>
<div class="figcenter"> <ANTIMG src="images/cover.jpg" width-obs="500" height-obs="753" alt="" title="" /></div>
<p> </p>
<div class="figcenter"> <ANTIMG src="images/frontis.jpg" width-obs="500" height-obs="770" alt="JU-JU MASK FROM IBO COUNTRY, SOUTHERN NIGERIA" title="" /> <span class="caption">JU-JU MASK FROM IBO COUNTRY, SOUTHERN NIGERIA</span></div>
<p> </p>
<h1>FOLK STORIES</h1>
<h3>FROM</h3>
<h1>SOUTHERN NIGERIA<br/> WEST AFRICA</h1>
<p> </p>
<h3>BY</h3>
<h2>ELPHINSTONE DAYRELL, F.R.G.S., F.R.A.I.</h2>
<h4>DISTRICT COMMISSIONER, SOUTHERN NIGERIA</h4>
<p> </p>
<h4>WITH AN INTRODUCTION BY</h4>
<h2>ANDREW LANG</h2>
<p> </p>
<h4><i>WITH FRONTISPIECE</i></h4>
<p> </p>
<p> </p>
<h3>LONGMANS, GREEN AND CO.</h3>
<h4>39 PATERNOSTER ROW, LONDON</h4>
<h4>NEW YORK, BOMBAY, AND CALCUTTA</h4>
<h3>1910</h3>
<hr style="width: 65%;" />
<h2>CONTENTS</h2>
<p class="center"><i>Frontispiece from a Drawing in Colour by</i><br/>
Major <span class="smcap">G. M. de L. Dayrell</span></p>
<table summary="Contents">
<tr><td></td>
<td></td>
<td></td><td class="tocpg f1">PAGE</td></tr>
<tr><td></td><td></td>
<td><SPAN href="#INTRODUCTION">Introduction</SPAN></td><td class="tocpg"><SPAN href="#Page_vii">vii</SPAN></td></tr>
<tr><td class="tocch">I.</td>
<td> </td>
<td><SPAN href="#I">The Tortoise with a Pretty Daughter</SPAN></td>
<td class="tocpg"><SPAN href="#Page_1">1</SPAN></td></tr>
<tr><td class="tocch">II.</td>
<td> </td>
<td><SPAN href="#II">How a Hunter obtained Money from his Friends the Leopard, Goat, Bush Cat, and
Cock, and how he got out of repaying them</SPAN></td>
<td class="tocpg"><SPAN href="#Page_6">6</SPAN></td></tr>
<tr><td class="tocch">III.</td>
<td> </td>
<td><SPAN href="#III">The Woman with two Skins</SPAN></td><td class="tocpg"><SPAN href="#Page_11">11</SPAN></td></tr>
<tr><td class="tocch">IV.</td>
<td> </td>
<td><SPAN href="#IV">The King's Magic Drum</SPAN></td><td class="tocpg"><SPAN href="#Page_20">20</SPAN></td></tr>
<tr><td class="tocch">V.</td>
<td> </td>
<td><SPAN href="#V">Ituen and the King's Wife</SPAN></td><td class="tocpg"><SPAN href="#Page_29">29</SPAN></td></tr>
<tr><td class="tocch">VI.</td>
<td> </td>
<td><SPAN href="#VI">Of the Pretty Stranger who Killed the King</SPAN></td><td class="tocpg"><SPAN href="#Page_33">33</SPAN></td></tr>
<tr><td class="tocch">VII.</td>
<td> </td>
<td><SPAN href="#VII">Why the Bat flies by Night</SPAN></td><td class="tocpg"><SPAN href="#Page_36">36</SPAN></td></tr>
<tr><td class="tocch">VIII.</td>
<td> </td>
<td><SPAN href="#VIII">The Disobedient Daughter who Married a Skull</SPAN></td><td class="tocpg"><SPAN href="#Page_38">38</SPAN></td></tr>
<tr><td class="tocch">IX.</td>
<td> </td>
<td><SPAN href="#IX">The King who Married the Cock's Daughter</SPAN></td><td class="tocpg"><SPAN href="#Page_42">42</SPAN></td></tr>
<tr><td class="tocch">X.</td>
<td> </td>
<td><SPAN href="#X">Concerning the Woman, the Ape, and the Child</SPAN></td><td class="tocpg"><SPAN href="#Page_46">46</SPAN></td></tr>
<tr><td class="tocch">XI.</td>
<td> </td>
<td><SPAN href="#XI">The Fish and The Leopard's Wife; or, Why the Fish lives in the
Water</SPAN></td><td class="tocpg"><SPAN href="#Page_49">49</SPAN></td></tr>
<tr><td class="tocch">XII.</td>
<td> </td>
<td><SPAN href="#XII">Why the Bat is Ashamed to be seen in the
Daytime</SPAN></td><td class="tocpg"><SPAN href="#Page_51">51</SPAN></td></tr>
<tr><td class="tocch">XIII.</td>
<td> </td>
<td><SPAN href="#XIII">Why the Worms live Underneath the Ground</SPAN></td><td class="tocpg"><SPAN href="#Page_56">56</SPAN></td></tr>
<tr><td class="tocch">XIV.</td>
<td> </td>
<td><SPAN href="#XIV">The Elephant and the Tortoise; or, Why the Worms are Blind and the Elephant has Small
Eyes</SPAN></td><td class="tocpg"><SPAN href="#Page_58">58</SPAN></td></tr>
<tr><td class="tocch">XV.</td>
<td> </td>
<td><SPAN href="#XV">Why a Hawk kills Chickens</SPAN></td><td class="tocpg"><SPAN href="#Page_62">62</SPAN></td></tr>
<tr><td class="tocch">XVI.</td>
<td> </td>
<td><SPAN href="#XVI">Why the Sun and the Moon live in the Sky</SPAN></td><td class="tocpg"><SPAN href="#Page_64">64</SPAN></td></tr>
<tr><td class="tocch">XVII.</td>
<td> </td>
<td><SPAN href="#XVII">Why the Flies Bother the Cows</SPAN></td><td class="tocpg"><SPAN href="#Page_66">66</SPAN></td></tr>
<tr><td class="tocch">XVIII.</td>
<td> </td>
<td><SPAN href="#XVIII">Why the Cat kills Rats</SPAN></td><td class="tocpg"><SPAN href="#Page_68">68</SPAN></td></tr>
<tr><td class="tocch">XIX.</td>
<td> </td>
<td><SPAN href="#XIX">The Story of the Lightning and the Thunder</SPAN></td><td class="tocpg"><SPAN href="#Page_70">70</SPAN></td></tr>
<tr><td class="tocch">XX.</td>
<td> </td>
<td><SPAN href="#XX">Why the Bush Cow and the Elephant are bad
Friends</SPAN></td><td class="tocpg"><SPAN href="#Page_72">72</SPAN></td></tr>
<tr><td class="tocch">XXI.</td>
<td> </td>
<td><SPAN href="#XXI">The Cock who caused a Fight between two
Towns</SPAN></td><td class="tocpg"><SPAN href="#Page_76">76</SPAN></td></tr>
<tr><td class="tocch">XXII.</td>
<td> </td>
<td><SPAN href="#XXII">The Affair of the Hippopotamus and the Tortoise; or, Why the Hippopotamus
lives in the Water</SPAN></td><td class="tocpg"><SPAN href="#Page_79">79</SPAN></td></tr>
<tr><td class="tocch">XXIII.</td>
<td> </td>
<td><SPAN href="#XXIII">Why Dead People are Buried</SPAN></td><td class="tocpg"><SPAN href="#Page_81">81</SPAN></td></tr>
<tr><td class="tocch">XXIV.</td>
<td> </td>
<td><SPAN href="#XXIV">Of the Fat Woman who Melted Away</SPAN></td><td class="tocpg"><SPAN href="#Page_83">83</SPAN></td></tr>
<tr><td class="tocch">XXV.</td>
<td> </td>
<td><SPAN href="#XXV">Concerning the Leopard, the Squirrel, and
the Tortoise</SPAN></td><td class="tocpg"><SPAN href="#Page_86">86</SPAN></td></tr>
<tr><td class="tocch">XXVI.</td>
<td> </td>
<td><SPAN href="#XXVI">Why the Moon Waxes and Wanes</SPAN></td><td class="tocpg"><SPAN href="#Page_91">91</SPAN></td></tr>
<tr><td class="tocch">XXVII.</td>
<td> </td>
<td><SPAN href="#XXVII">The Story of the Leopard, the Tortoise, and
the Bush Rat</SPAN></td><td class="tocpg"><SPAN href="#Page_93">93</SPAN></td></tr>
<tr><td class="tocch">XXVIII.</td>
<td> </td>
<td><SPAN href="#XXVIII">The King and the Ju Ju Tree</SPAN></td><td class="tocpg"><SPAN href="#Page_98">98</SPAN></td></tr>
<tr><td class="tocch">XXIX.</td>
<td> </td>
<td><SPAN href="#XXIX">How the Tortoise overcame the Elephant
and the Hippopotamus</SPAN></td><td class="tocpg"><SPAN href="#Page_104">104</SPAN></td></tr>
<tr><td class="tocch">XXX.</td>
<td> </td>
<td><SPAN href="#XXX">Of the Pretty Girl and the Seven Jealous
Women</SPAN></td><td class="tocpg"><SPAN href="#Page_107">107</SPAN></td></tr>
<tr><td class="tocch">XXXI.</td>
<td> </td>
<td><SPAN href="#XXXI">How the Cannibals drove the People from Insofan Mountain to the Cross River
(Ikom)</SPAN></td><td class="tocpg"><SPAN href="#Page_115">115</SPAN></td></tr>
<tr><td class="tocch">XXXII.</td>
<td> </td>
<td><SPAN href="#XXXII">The Lucky Fisherman</SPAN></td><td class="tocpg"><SPAN href="#Page_119">119</SPAN></td></tr>
<tr><td class="tocch">XXXIII.</td>
<td> </td>
<td><SPAN href="#XXXIII">The Orphan Boy and the Magic Stone</SPAN></td><td class="tocpg"><SPAN href="#Page_121">121</SPAN></td></tr>
<tr><td class="tocch">XXXIV.</td>
<td> </td>
<td><SPAN href="#XXXIV">The Slave Girl who tried to Kill her Mistress</SPAN></td><td class="tocpg"><SPAN href="#Page_126">126</SPAN></td></tr>
<tr><td class="tocch">XXXV.</td>
<td> </td>
<td><SPAN href="#XXXV">The King and the 'Nsiat Bird</SPAN></td><td class="tocpg"><SPAN href="#Page_133">133</SPAN></td></tr>
<tr><td class="tocch">XXXVI.</td>
<td> </td>
<td><SPAN href="#XXXVI">Concerning the Fate of Essido and his Evil
Companions</SPAN></td><td class="tocpg"><SPAN href="#Page_135">135</SPAN></td></tr>
<tr><td class="tocch">XXXVII.</td>
<td> </td>
<td><SPAN href="#XXXVII">Concerning the Hawk and the Owl</SPAN></td><td class="tocpg"><SPAN href="#Page_142">142</SPAN></td></tr>
<tr><td class="tocch">XXXVIII.</td>
<td> </td>
<td><SPAN href="#XXXVIII">The Story of the Drummer and the
Alligators</SPAN></td><td class="tocpg"><SPAN href="#Page_145">145</SPAN></td></tr>
<tr><td class="tocch">XXXIX.</td>
<td> </td>
<td><SPAN href="#XXXIX">The 'Nsasak Bird and the Odudu Bird</SPAN></td><td class="tocpg"><SPAN href="#Page_153">153</SPAN></td></tr>
<tr><td class="tocch">XL.</td>
<td> </td>
<td><SPAN href="#XL">The Election of the King Bird (the black-and-white
Fishing Eagle)</SPAN></td><td class="tocpg"><SPAN href="#Page_156">156</SPAN></td></tr>
</table>
<hr style="width: 65%;" />
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_vii" id="Page_vii">[vii]</SPAN></span></p>
<h2><SPAN name="INTRODUCTION" id="INTRODUCTION"></SPAN>INTRODUCTION</h2>
<p>Many years ago a book on the Folk-Tales of the Eskimo was published,
and the editor of <i>The Academy</i> (Dr. Appleton) told one of his minions
to send it to me for revision. By mischance it was sent to an eminent
expert in Political Economy, who, never suspecting any error, took the
book for the text of an interesting essay on the economics of "the
blameless Hyperboreans."</p>
<p>Mr. Dayrell's "Folk Stories from Southern Nigeria" appeal to the
anthropologist within me, no less than to the lover of what children
and older people call "Fairy Tales." The stories are full of mentions
of strange institutions, as well as of rare adventures. I may be
permitted to offer some running notes and comments on this mass of
African curiosities from the crowded lumber-room of the native mind.</p>
<p>I. <i>The Tortoise with a Pretty Daughter.</i>—The story, like the tales
of the dark native tribes of Australia, rises from that state of fancy
by which man draws (at least for purposes of fiction) no line between
himself and the lower animals. Why should not the fair heroine, Adet,
daughter of the tortoise, be the daughter of human parents? The tale
would be none the less interesting, and a good deal more credible to
the mature intelligence. But the ancient<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_viii" id="Page_viii">[viii]</SPAN></span> fashion of animal parentage
is presented. It may have originated, like the stories of the
Australians, at a time when men were totemists, when every person had
a bestial or vegetable "family-name," and when, to account for these
hereditary names, stories of descent from a supernatural, bestial,
primeval race were invented. In the fables of the world, speaking
animals, human in all but outward aspect, are the characters. The
fashion is universal among savages; it descends to the Buddha's
<i>jataka</i>, or parables, to Æsop and La Fontaine. There could be no such
fashion if fables had originated among civilised human beings.</p>
<p>The polity of the people who tell this story seems to be despotic. The
king makes a law that any girl prettier than the prince's fifty wives
shall be put to death, with her parents. Who is to be the Paris, and
give the fatal apple to the most fair? Obviously the prince is the
Paris. He falls in love with Miss Tortoise, guided to her as he is by
the bird who is "entranced with her beauty." In this tribe, as in
Homer's time, the lover offers a bride-price to the father of the
girl. In Homer cattle are the current medium; in Nigeria pieces of
cloth and brass rods are (or were) the currency. Observe the queen's
interest in an affair of true love. Though she knows that her son's
life is endangered by his honourable passion, she adds to the
bride-price out of her privy purse. It is "a long courting"; four
years pass, while pretty Adet is "ower young to marry yet." The king
is very angry when the news of this breach of the royal marriage Act
first comes to his ears. He summons the whole of his subjects, his
throne, a<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_ix" id="Page_ix">[ix]</SPAN></span> stone, is set out in the market-place, and Adet is brought
before him. He sees and is conquered.</p>
<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
<span class="i0">"It is no wonder," said the king,<br/></span>
<span class="i0">"This tortoise-girl might be a queen."<br/></span></div>
</div>
<p>Though a despot, his Majesty, before cancelling his law, has to
consult the eight Egbos, or heads of secret societies, whose magical
powers give the sacred sanction to legislation. The Egbo (see p. 4,
note) is a mumbo-jumbo man. He answers to the bogey who presides over
the rites of initiation in the Australian tribes.</p>
<p>When the Egbo is about, women must hide and keep out of the way. The
king proclaims the cancelling of the law. The Egbos might resist, for
they have all the knives and poisons of the secret societies behind
them. But the king, a master of the human heart, acts like Sir Robert
Walpole. He buys the Egbo votes "with palm-wine and money," and gives
a feast to the women at the marriage dances. But why does the king
give half his kingdom to the tortoise? When an adventurer in fairy
tales wins the hand of the king's heiress, he usually gets half the
kingdom. The tortoise is said to have been "the wisest of all men and
animals." Why? He merely did not kill his daughter. But there is no
temptation to kill daughters in a country where they are valuable
assets, and command high bride-prices. In the Australian tribes, the
bride-price is simply another girl. A man swops his sister to another
man for the other man's sister, or for any girl of whose hand the
other man has the disposal.<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_x" id="Page_x">[x]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>II. The second story is a very ingenious commercial parable, "Never
lend money, you only make a dangerous enemy." The story also explains
why bush cats eat poultry.</p>
<p>III. <i>The Woman with Two Skins</i> is a peculiar version of the story of
the courteous Sir Gawain with his bride, hideous by day, and a pearl
of loveliness by night. The Ju Ju man answers to the witch in our
fairy tales and to the mother-in-law of the prince, who, by a magical
potion, makes him forget his own true love. She, however, is always
victorious, and the prince</p>
<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
<span class="i2">"Prepares another marriage,<br/></span>
<span class="i0">Their hearts so full of love and glee,"<br/></span></div>
</div>
<p>and ousts the false bride, like Lord Bateman in the ballad, when
Sophia came home. In this case of Lord Bateman, the scholiast
(Thackeray, probably) suggests that his Lordship secured the consent
of the Church as the king in the tortoise story won that of the Egbos.
Our tale then wanders into the fairy tale of the king who is deceived
into drowning his children, in European folk-lore, because he is
informed that they are puppies. The Water Ju Ju, however, saves these
black princes, and brings forward the rightful heir very dramatically
at a wrestling match, where the lad overthrows more than he thought,
like Orlando in <i>As You Like It</i>, and conquers the heart of the
jealous queen as well as his athletic opponents.</p>
<p>In the conclusion the jealous woman is handed over to the
ecclesiastical arm of the Egbos; she is flogged, and, as in the case
of Jeanne d'Arc, is<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_xi" id="Page_xi">[xi]</SPAN></span> burned alive, "and her ashes were thrown into the
river." Human nature is much the same everywhere.</p>
<p>IV. <i>The King's Magic Drum.</i>—The drum is the mystic cauldron of
ancient Welsh romance, which "always provides plenty of good food and
drink." But the drum has its drawback, the food "goes bad" if its
owner steps over a stick in the road or a fallen tree, a tabu like the
<i>geisas</i> of ancient Irish legends. The tortoise, in this tale, has the
<i>geisas</i> power; he can make the king give him anything he chooses to
ask. This very queer constraint occurs constantly in the Cuchullain
cycle of Irish romances, and in <i>The Black Thief</i>. (You can buy it for
a penny in Dublin, or read it in Thackeray's <i>Little Tour in
Ireland</i>.) The King is constrained to part with the drum, but does not
tell the tortoise about the tabu and the drawback. The tortoise,
though disappointed, at least pays his score off in public, and then
the tale wanders into the <i>Hop o' my Thumb</i> formula, and the trail of
ashes. Finally the story, like most stories, explains the origin of an
animal peculiarity, why tortoises live under prickly tie-tie palms.
That explanation was clearly in the author's mind from the first, but
to reach his point he adopted the formula of the mystic object, drum
or cauldron, which provides endless supplies, and has a counteracting
charm attached to it, a tabu.</p>
<p>V. <i>Ituen and the King's Wife.</i>—Some of these tales have this
peculiarity, that the characters possess names, as Ituen, Offiong, and
Attem. They are thus what people call <i>sagas</i>, not mere <i>Märchen</i>. All
the pseudo-historic legends of the Greek states, of Thebes,<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_xii" id="Page_xii">[xii]</SPAN></span> Athens,
Mycenæ, Pylos, and so on, are folk-tales converted into saga, and
adapted and accepted as historical. Some of these Nigerian fairy-tales
are in the same cast. The story of Athamas of Iolcos and the sacrifice
of any of his descendants who went into the town hall, exactly
corresponds to the fate of the family of Ituen (p. 32).<SPAN name="FNanchor_1_1" id="FNanchor_1_1"></SPAN><SPAN href="#Footnote_1_1" class="fnanchor">[1]</SPAN> The whole
Athamas story, in Greece, is a tissue of popular tales found in every
part of the world. This Ituen story, as usual, explains the habits of
animals, vultures, and dogs, and illustrates the awful cruelties of
Egbo law.</p>
<p>VI. <i>The Pretty Stranger</i> is a native variant of <i>Judith and
Holofernes</i>.</p>
<p>VII. A "Just So Story," a myth to explain the ways of animals. The
cauldron of Medea, which destroyed the wrong old person, and did not
rejuvenate him, is introduced. "All the stories have been told," all
the world over.</p>
<p>VIII. <i>The Disobedient Daughter who Married a Skull.</i>—This is most
original; though all our ballads and tales about the pretty girl who
is carried to the land of the dead by her lover's ghost (Bürger's
<i>Lenore</i>) have the same fundamental idea. Then comes in the common
moral, the Reward of Courtesy, as in Perrault's <i>Les Fées</i>. But the
machinery of the Nigerian romance leads up to the Return of Proserpine
from the Dead in a truly fanciful way.</p>
<p>IX. <i>The King who Married the Cock's Daughter</i> is Æsop's man who
married the woman that had been a cat. As Adia unen pecks at the corn,
the other lady caught and ate a mouse.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_xiii" id="Page_xiii">[xiii]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>X. <i>The Woman, the Ape, and the Child.</i>—This tale illustrates Egbo
juridicature very powerfully, and is told to account for Nigerian
marriage law.</p>
<p>XI. <i>The Fish and the Leopard's Wife.</i>—Another "Just So Story."</p>
<p>XII. <i>The Bat.</i>—Another explanation of the nocturnal habits of the
bat. The tortoise appears as the wisest of things, like the hare in
North America, Brer Rabbit, the Bushman Mantis insect, and so on.</p>
<p>XIII., XIV., XV. All of these are explanatory "Just So Stories."</p>
<p>XVI. <i>Why the Sun and Moon live in the Sky.</i>—Sun and Moon, in savage
myth, lived on earth at first, but the Nigerian explanation of their
retreat to the sky is, as far as I know, without parallel elsewhere.</p>
<p>XVII., XVIII. "Just So Stories."</p>
<p>XIX. Quite an original myth of Thunder and Lightning: much below the
divine dignity of such myths elsewhere. Thunder is not the Voice of
Zeus or of Baiame the Father (Australian), but of an old sheep! The
gods have not made the Nigerians poetical.</p>
<p>XX. Another "Just So Story."</p>
<p>XXI. <i>The Cock who caused a Fight</i> illustrates private war and justice
among the natives, and shows the Egbos refusing to admit the principle
of a fine in atonement for an offence.</p>
<p>XXII. <i>The Affair of the Hippopotamus and of the Tortoise.</i>—A very
curious variant of the <i>Whuppitie Stoorie</i>, or Tom-Tit-Tot story,
depending on the power conferred by learning the secret name of an
opponent. These secret names are conferred at Australian ceremonies.
Any amount of the learning about secret names is easily accessible.<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_xiv" id="Page_xiv">[xiv]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>XXIII. <i>Why Dead People are Buried.</i>—Here we meet the Creator so
common in the religious beliefs of Africans as of most barbarous and
savage peoples. "The Creator was a big chief." The Euahlayi Baiame is
rendered "Big Man" by Mrs. Langloh Parker (see The <i>Euahlayi Tribe</i>).
The myth is one of world-wide diffusion, explaining The Origin of
Death, usually by the fable of a message, forgotten and misrendered,
from the Creator.</p>
<p>XXIV. <i>The Fat Woman who Melted Away.</i>—The revival of this beautiful
creature, from all that was left of her, the toe, is an incident very
common in folk-tales, i.e. the Scottish <i>Rashin Coatie</i>. (The word
"dowry" is used throughout where "bride-price" would better express
the institution. The Homeric ἕνα is meant.)</p>
<p>XXV. <i>The Leopard, the Squirrel, and the Tortoise.</i>—A "Just So
Story."</p>
<p>XXVI. <i>Why the Moon Waxes and Wanes.</i>—A lunar myth; not a poetical
though a kindly explanation of the habits of the moon.</p>
<p>XXVII. <i>The Story of the Leopard, the Tortoise, and the Bush Rat.</i>—A
"Just So Story."</p>
<p>XXVIII. <i>The King and the JuJu Tree.</i>—This is a fine example of Ju Ju
beliefs, and of an extraordinary sacrifice to a Ju Ju power located in
a tree. Goats, chickens, and white men are common offerings, but
"seven baskets of flies" might propitiate Beelzebub. The "spirit-man"
who can succeed when sacrifice fails, chooses the king's daughter as
his reward, as is usual in <i>Märchen</i>. Compare Melampus and Pero in
Greece. The skull in spirit-land here plays a friendly part, in
advising the princess, like Proserpine, not to eat among the dead.
This caution is found everywhere<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_xv" id="Page_xv">[xv]</SPAN></span>—in the Greek version of Orpheus and
Eurydice, in the <i>Kalewala</i>, and in Scott's "Wandering Willie's Tale,"
in <i>Redgauntlet</i>. Like Orpheus, the girl is not to look back while
leaving spirit-land. Her successful escape, by obeying the injunctions
of the skull, is unusual.</p>
<p>XXIX. <i>How the Tortoise overcame the Elephant and the
Hippopotamus.</i>—A "Just So Story," with the tortoise as cunning as
Brer Rabbit.</p>
<p>XXX. <i>Of the Pretty Girl and the Seven Jealous Women.</i>—Here the good
little bird plays the part of the popinjay who "up and spake" with
good effect in the first ballads. The useful Ju Ju man divines by
casting lots, a common method among the Zulus. The revenge of the
pretty girl's father is certainly adequate.</p>
<p>XXXI. <i>How the Cannibals drove the People from Insofan Mountain to the
Cross River (Ikom).</i>—This professes to be historical, and concerns
human sacrifices, "to cool the new yams," and cannibalism.</p>
<p>XXXII. is unimportant.</p>
<p>In XXXIII. we find the ordeal poison, which destroys fifty witches.</p>
<p>XXXIV. <i>The Slave Girl who tried to Kill her Mistress</i> is a form of
our common tale of the waiting-maid who usurps the place of her
mistress, the Bride. The resurrection of the Bride from the water, at
the cry of her little sister, occurs in a remote quarter, among the
Samoyeds in Castren's <i>Samoyedische Märchen</i>, but there the opening is
in the style of <i>Asterinos and Pulja (Phrixus and Helle)</i> in Van
Hahn's <i>Griechische Märchen</i>. The False Bride story is, in an ancient
French <i>chanson de geste</i>, part of the legend of<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_xvi" id="Page_xvi">[xvi]</SPAN></span> the mother of
Charlemagne. The story also occurs in Callaway's collection of Zulu
fairy tales. In the Nigerian version the manners, customs, and
cruelties are all thoroughly West African.</p>
<p>XXXV. <i>The King and the 'Nsiat Bird</i> accounts, as usual, for the
habits of the bird; and also illustrates the widespread custom of
killing twins.</p>
<p>XXXVI. reflects the well-known practices of poison and the ordeal by
poison.</p>
<p>XXXVII. is another "Just So Story."</p>
<p>XXXVIII. <i>The Drummer and the Alligators.</i>—In this grim tale of one
of the abominable secret societies the human alligators appear to be
regarded as being capable of taking bestial form, like werewolves or
the leopards of another African secret society.</p>
<p>XXXIX. and XL. are both picturesque "Just So Stories," so common in
the folk-lore of all countries.</p>
<p>The most striking point in the tales is the combination of good humour
and good feeling with horrible cruelties, and the reign of terror of
the Egbos and lesser societies. European influences can scarcely do
much harm, apart from whisky, in Nigeria. As to religion, we do not
learn that the Creator receives any sacrifice: in savage and barbaric
countries He usually gets none. Only Ju Jus, whether ghosts or fiends
in general, are propitiated. The Other is "too high and too far."</p>
<p>I have briefly indicated the stories which have variants in ancient
myth and European <i>Märchen</i> or fairy tales.</p>
<p class="p1">ANDREW LANG.</p>
<h3>FOOTNOTES</h3>
<div class="footnotes">
<div class="footnote"><p><SPAN name="Footnote_1_1" id="Footnote_1_1"></SPAN><SPAN href="#FNanchor_1_1"><span class="label">[1]</span></SPAN> See the Platonic dialogue, Minos, 315-6, and Athamas in
Roscher's <i>Lexikon</i>.</p>
</div>
</div>
<hr style="width: 65%;" />
<h2>FOLK STORIES<br/> FROM SOUTHERN NIGERIA</h2>
<hr style="width: 65%;" />
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_1" id="Page_1">[1]</SPAN></span></p>
<div style="break-after:column;"></div><br />