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Download ebook pdf of Общая Хирургия Курс Лекций Учебное Пособие 2Nd Edition Ковалев А И full chapter
Download ebook pdf of Общая Хирургия Курс Лекций Учебное Пособие 2Nd Edition Ковалев А И full chapter
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(1) Rattray’s Hausa version is identical with the Jamaican. The
Surinam story lacks the Dry-head ending. In the Madagascar and
Congo stories, the trick turns upon pretending that a spirit warns the
wife against poison if she partakes of her husband’s food. In Theal,
Kenkebe visits his father-in-law in time of famine, is feasted on an ox
and given bags of corn, which he conceals. Compare numbers 21c,
23, 24, 25, and 29.
(2) A Masai story (Hollis, 15) tells of two brothers who are given a
bullock to slaughter. They carry it to “a place where there was no
man or animal, or bird, or insect, or anything living,” and a devil puts
them to much inconvenience. The pursuit of Anansi by the shadow
of Death, in the Wona version of 27, has already been referred to in
the Dry-head episode. In Barker, 81–84, the stolen flour-producing
stone which Anansi is carrying off, sticks to his head and grinds him
to pieces, as referred to in the note to number 22.
In Theal, Kenkebe’s wife and son hide themselves behind the rock
which conceals his secret store, and push over a stone which
pursues him as far as his own house. [253]
In Barker, 66, the king gives to the greedy man a box so enchanted
that it can never be put down.
In Sac and Fox Indian tales, JAFL 15: 177, the monster-killing twins
bring home a rock which sticks upon their backs until they carry it to
its place again.
In Pamela Smith’s version, Anansi shoots the bird who is doing him
the favor of carrying off Dry-head. See note to number 70 and
compare P. Smith, 59–64, in which Tiger, pursued by the “Nyams,”
begs one animal after another to hide him, but always lets his
presence be known. Finally, when Goat kills the “Nyams,” he eats
Goat with the “Nyams.”
[Contents]
The story depends upon the idea that it is unlucky to reveal to others
a marvel one has seen oneself, or to repeat certain taboo words. A
lad in the Santa Cruz mountains explained the taboo by saying that
Anansi had “six” legs. Another said that Anansi’s mother’s name was
“Six.” So in Pamela Smith (JAFL 9: 278), the Queen’s name is
“Five.” Compare Rivière, 177; Krug, JAFL 25: 120; Schwab, JAFL
32: 437, and the next two numbers in this collection.
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Compare the Bulu tales, Schwab, JAFL 27: 284–285; 32: 434.
In JAFL 32, Pangolin offers to initiate the animals one by one and
makes them climb a tree and jump upon a concealed rock, which
kills them. Turtle finally circumvents the trick.
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36. Horse and Anansi. [Story]
For the trick of sending after fire in order to enjoy the whole of a
common store compare Koelle, 166–167; Tremearne, 255, 263;
Hartt, 34; Harris, Friends, 79–80; Nights, 282–284; Christensen, 89;
Georgia, JAFL 32: 403.
For the trick of leaving the knife or the spoon behind, see number 11
in this collection.
It is clear, from the picture drawn of Horse as he starts for the Fire,
that the story-teller thinks of the actors in the story as animals, even
when he shows them behaving like human beings.
[Contents]
Mrs. W. E. Wilson (Wona) thinks that the second version of the story,
told by Jekyll, 70–72, is not a true negro form, because of the great
respect in which Jamaica negroes hold the rites of the established
church.
As a device for getting victims cooked and eaten, the story is related
to numbers 16 and 38 in this collection.
[Contents]
In Parkes’s version, the substitution of the human for the fish victim
not only spoils the wit of the story but obscures its relation to the
story of Anansi’s visit to fish-country as it appears in number 39. The
identity of the two is proved by the structure of the [256]story, which
falls into two parts. (1) Anansi, pretending to cure a sick relative, eats
her instead. (2) The mule offers to avenge her and plays dead
outside Anansi’s door; when he attempts to make use of her for food,
she drags him into the water and drowns him, as in number 6.
For (1) compare Cronise and Ward, 226–230, where Rabbit pretends
to cure Leopard’s children and eats them up; Nassau, 125–126,
where Tortoise pretends to bring children out of Crocodile’s hundred
eggs, and eats them all.
In Jekyll, 135–137, an old lady meddles with a jar she has been told
not to touch and which, as soon as she gets her hand in, drags her
to the sea and drowns her.
In Pamela Smith, 44–46, Anansi eats the sick mother under pretence
of cure, and bribes Dog to carry him across the river, but there is no
vengeance; Dog himself is swallowed by Crocodile.
[Contents]
Compare: Jacottet, note page 262; Parsons, Andros Island, 103 and
note; Jones, 121–123; 133–136.
Version (b). In Jekyll, 46–47, Puss gives the rats a ball and only
those members of the family escape who attend to little Rat’s
warning, for he has heard the cat’s song. Compare Chatelain, 189–
191, and see note to number 86, where the little brother or sister
discovers by the words of a song a treacherous intention.
[Contents]
In Dayrell, 64–65, Sun and Water are great friends. Sun visits Water,
but Water never visits Sun. At length, Sun invites Water and builds a
great compound to receive him and his friends. All come, take
possession, and crowd Sun and his wife, Moon, out into the sky.
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In Jones, 22, Sparrow makes the boast about his father’s crop of
potatoes. 2
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For a discussion of Grimm 110, The Jew among Thorns, see Bolte u.
Polívka 2: 490–503.
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In Barker, 123, three sons wish to do honor to their mother and the
first declares that he will make her a “sepulchre of stone.”
[Contents]
In Fortier, 13–19, the Devil gives the little Earthworm his wish: “I
want to become big big and beat everybody who will come to trouble
and bother me. Give me only that and I shall be satisfied.” The
consequences are disastrous for the earth-worm.
[Contents]
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The story as Williams tells it is made up of three parts. (1) Bird and
Hunter set up the same home without either knowing of the other. (2)
Bird supplies Fish with wings and brings him to the feeding-patch,
then takes the wings and flies away when Hunter comes in pursuit.
(3) Fish is captured as the thief, but escapes by song and dance into
the sea.
(2) The episode is identical with Anansi and the Birds in number 39,
but motivated differently. See numbers 2b, 5b, 21b. In Bates’s
Jamaica version, JAFL 9: 122–124, Mudfish is left in [261]the
Watchman’s hands without the preliminary episode of the common
dwelling, and the escape is effected in the same manner.
[Contents]
These three and number 17b are the only Rabbit stories I heard in
Jamaica. A woman named Ellen told the stories to the lads from
whom I heard them, but she refused to be interviewed. See numbers
21a, 12, 23.
[Contents]
The wit of the animal race turns upon the fact that a slow animal,
contrary to all expectation, wins over a swift. The story takes three
forms. (1) The swift animal is so sure of winning that it delays and
“slow but sure wins the race.” (2) The little animal wins by hanging
on behind while the other runs, and thus slipping in ahead at the
end. (3) The slow animal arranges a relay by placing one of its kind
along the road and taking its own position in hiding near the goal.
See Dähnhardt 4: 46–96.
(3) The Jamaica stories always follow the form of the relay race, as
in Jekyll, 39–43. Compare Basset 1: 15; Bleek, 32; Frobenius 3: 15;
Rattray, Chinyanje 131; Renel 2: 150–152; Schwab, JAFL 27: 277;
Hartt, 7–15; Smith, 543; Christensen, 5–9; Jones, 5–6; Edwards, 69;
Harris, Uncle Remus, 87–91; Boas, JAFL 25: 214–215; Parsons,
Sea Islands, 79; JAFL 30: 174; 32: 394; and references to American
Indian stories in Boas, JAFL 25: 249; Ponape, Hambruch, Südsee-
Märchen, p. 196; note, p. 347.
For the flying-trial for a bride, compare Parsons, Andros Island, 101.
[Contents]
See number 149, where the bird in the tree starves and Hopping
[262]Dick on the ground picks up worms and wins the match. In this
story, though incomplete, it is intimated that the bird in the tree wins.
In Dayrell, the birds propose to starve seven days to see which will
be king. One leaves a hole out of which he creeps unobserved to
feed.
In Parsons, one bird chooses a fruit tree, the other a “dry” tree. The
song sung by the winning bird runs,—
“This day Monday mornin’
Tama tama tam!”
In Fortier, the lady-love brings food to her favorite bird. The cooing
song in the Jamaica versions suggests this connection.
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