Yeats' FAIRY AND FOLK
TALES OF THE IRISH PEASANTRY
SOME AUTHORITIES ON IRISH FOLK-LORE
Croker's Legends of the South of Ireland. Lady Wilde's Ancient
Legends of Ireland. Sir William Wilde's Irish Popular Superstitions.
McAnally's Irish Wonders. Irish Folk-Lore, by Lageniensis. Lover's
Legends and Stories of the Irish Peasantry. Patrick Kennedy's
Legendary Fictions of the Irish Celts, Banks of the Boro,
Legends of Mount Leinster, and Banks of the Duffrey; Carleton's
Traits and Stories of the Irish Peasantry; and the chap-books, Royal
Fairy Tales, Hibernian Tales, and Tales of the Fairies.
Besides these there are many books on general subjects, containing stray
folk-lore, such as Mr. and Mrs. S. C. Hall's Ireland; Lady Chatterton's Rambles in the South of
Ireland; Gerald Griffin's Tales of a Jury-room; and the Leadbeater
Papers. For banshee stories see Barrington's Recollections and Miss
Lefanu's Memoirs of my Grandmother. In O'Donovan's introduction to the
Four Masters are several tales. The principal magazine articles are in
the Dublin and London Magazine for 1825-1828 (Sir William Wilde calls
this the best collection of Irish folk-lore in existence); and in the Dublin
University Magazine for 1839 and 1878, those in '78 being by Miss
Maclintock. The Folk-Lore Journal and the Folk-Lore Record contain
much Irish folk-lore, as also do the Ossianic Society's publications and
the proceedings of the Kilkenny Archæological Society. Old Irish
magazines, such as the Penny Journal, Newry Magazine, and
Duffy's Sixpenny Magazine and Hibernian Magazine, have much
scattered through them. Among the peasantry are immense quantities of ungathered
legends and beliefs.

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![Aran Islanders, J. Synge [1898] (public domain photograph)](irishwmn.jpg) |