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362 PASSPORT TO MAGONIA<br />

CHAPTER TWO<br />

1. Walter Yvelmg Evans Wentz, The Fairy-Faith in Celtic Countries,<br />

its Psychological Origin and Nature (Obcrthur, Remies: 1909).<br />

2. Paul Sebillot, Traditions et Superstitions de la Haute-Bretagne,<br />

I,103-104.<br />

3. Edwin S. Hartland, The Science of Fairy Tales—An Inquiry into<br />

Fairy Mythology (London, 1891).<br />

4. Genesis 18: 4-5, 8.<br />

5. Probe Magazine, II, 5 (September-October, 1965), p. 11.<br />

6. Aime Michel, Flying Saucers and the Straight-line Mystery (S. G.<br />

Phillips, New York: 1958), p. 109.<br />

7. Flying Saucer Investigating Committee, P.O. Drawer G., Akron,<br />

Ohio.<br />

8. Waveney Girvan, Flying Saucer Review, IX, 5 (September-<br />

October, 1963).<br />

9. London Daily Sketch, July 17, 1963.<br />

10. Leroux de Lincy, Livres des Legendes, p. 100.<br />

11. Rocky Mountain News, November 12, 1966.<br />

12. "Down on the Farm," Flying Saucer Review, X, 5 (September-<br />

October, 1964), p. 22. Unnamed author quotes from a Binghampton,<br />

New York, paper dated May 9, 1964.<br />

13. Knoxville News-Sentinel, November 6, 1957. See also Coral<br />

Lorenzon, "UFO Occupants in the United States," "The Humanoids"<br />

(Special Issue), Flying Saucer Review (August, 1967), pp. 52-63.<br />

14. See also CSI Newsletter (December, 1967).<br />

15. Flying Saucers, February, 1968, p. 10.<br />

CHAPTER THREE<br />

1. Reprinted by permission of S. G. Phillips, Inc. from Flying Saucers<br />

and the Straight-line Mystery by Aime Michel, p. 82. (Copyright ©<br />

1958 by Aime Michel.)<br />

2. Ibid.,p.81.<br />

3. Robert Silverberg, Mound Builders of Ancient America—The<br />

Archaeology of a Myth (N.Y. Graphic Society, Greenwich, Conn.:<br />

1968),p. 33.<br />

NOTES TO CHAPTERS 363<br />

4. Gelin, Etudes de Folk-lore et d'Ethnographie Liguge (Bibliotheque<br />

du "Pays Poitevin": 1900).<br />

5. C. Puichaud, Tradition Populaire du Poitou (1896).<br />

6. Marcel Ayme's La Vouivre, for example.<br />

7. Quoted without indication of source in A. Fenoglio, "Ancient<br />

Sky Visitors," Clypeus, III, 3, p. 13.<br />

8. Brian Stross, "The ?ihk'als," Flying Saucer Review, XIV, 3 (May-<br />

June, 1968), p. 12.<br />

9. Ibid.<br />

10. Gordon Crtighton, "Middle America Creature Reports," Flying<br />

Saucer Review, XIV, 3 (May-June, 1968), pp. 12-15.<br />

11. First published in 1620 as a pamphlet in Paris entitled "La<br />

Vision Publique d'un Horrible ct Trcs-Epouvantable Demon sur<br />

L'lSglise Cathcdrale de Quimpercorcntin en Bretagne" and reprinted<br />

in Lenglet-Dupresnoy, Recueil de Dissertations sur les Apparitions<br />

(Leloup, Paris: 1751), Vol. I, Pt. 2, p. 309. See also L. Gabriel-<br />

Robinet, he Diable, sa vie son oeuvre (Lugdunum- 1944).<br />

12. P. C. Jacob, Curiosites Infernales (Gamier, Paris: 1886).<br />

13. The first edition of Kirk's The Secret Commonwealth was published<br />

in 1815 by Longman & Company. Only one hundred copies<br />

were printed, and naturally they have become extremely rare. It was<br />

reprinted more recently. There is a very good English edition with<br />

a preface by Andrew Lang, and a French translation by Rcmy Salvator<br />

was published in 1896. The latter can be consulted in the Bibliotheque<br />

Nationale. The English edition is difficult to find in Paris; I found it<br />

in Edinburgh, where the Central Library and the National Library<br />

of Scotland are excellent places to begin this sort of study.<br />

14. The only formal theory I have encountered is the cabalist's<br />

belief related by R. P. le Brim, Histoire des Superstitions {Paris: 1750),<br />

IV, 398: that fairies were creatures of God whom He was unable to<br />

complete in the last day of Creation: "It is by this reason, according<br />

to Rabbi Abraham, that these spirits like only the mountains and<br />

show themselves to men only at night."<br />

15. Quoted by W. H. Hennessy, Revue Celt, I, 32-57, translated<br />

from Todd's Cogadh Gaedhel re Gallaibh, p. 174.<br />

16. R. H. B. Winder, "The Little Blue Man on Studham Common,"<br />

Flying Saucer Review, XIII (July-August, 1967), p. 3-<br />

17. This is the title of an anthology of fairy poetry, edited by Alfred

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