View Full Version : Eskimo Folk-Tales
- Kánagssuaq
- The guillemot that could talk
- Anarteq
- Tungujuluk and saunikoq
- Puagssuaq
- âtârssuaq
- ángángŬjuk
- Atdlarneq, the great glutton
- The two little outcasts
- The eagle and the whale
- Qasiagssaq, the great liar
- Kâgssagssuk, the homeless boy who became a strong man
- The wife who lied
- Nerrivik
- The thunder spirits
- Artuk, who did all forbidden things
- The men who changed wives
- Pâtussorssuaq, who killed his uncle
- Papik, who killed his wife's brother
- The soul that lived in the bodies of all beasts
- The man who stabbed his wife in the leg
- The inland-dwellers of etah
- The giant dog
- Kumagdlak and the living arrows
- Atungait, who went a-wandering
- The man who went out to search for his son
- The man who avenged the widows
- How the fog came
- The woman with the iron tail
- The man who became a star
- The great bear
- The man who took a vixen to wife
- The raven who wanted a wife
- íkardlítuarssuk
- Ukaleq
- Asalôq
- Makíte
- When the ravens could speak
- The raven and the goose
- The boy from the bottom of the sea, who frightened the people of the house to death
- The dwarfs
- The very obstinate man
- The insects that wooed a wifeless man
- Isigâligârssik
- Qalagánguasê, who passed to the land of ghosts
- ímarasugssuaq, who ate his wives
- The woman who had a bear as a foster-son
- Kúnigseq
- Qujâvârssuk
- Nukúnguasik, who escaped from the tupilak
- The coming of men, a long, long while ago
- The two friends who set off to travel round the world
- Introduction
- Title Page
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