(no title) “I was told a story by Mary Ellen Gallivan of Lomanaugh about an uncle of hers, O'Sullivan (Owen) of Lower Cummeen.” CBÉ 0608 Lore 1939 Mary Ellen Gallivan
(no title) “Two young men named Buckley and Sweeney were very fond of poaching game, and one night after a tiring day's travelling...” CBÉ 0608 Lore 1939 Michael McCarthy
(no title) “A man named Ouliveen Lynch of Gorralethir, Morley's Bridge, had a daughter married to Robert Gaine...” CBÉ 0608 Lore 1939
(no title) “Some forty or fifty years ago there lived at Meelick a woman called Mary Doyle who was said to go about in company with the Good People.” CBÉ 0608 Lore 1939 Mary Twoomey
(no title) “My grandmother believed in the return of the dead. She always swept the hearth clean with a bunch of heather...” CBÉ 0608 Lore 1939
(no title) “There is a family called O'Sullivan (McCann) living at the foot of Mangerton Mountain, and when a death is to...” CBÉ 0608 Lore 1939
(no title) “About a year ago a middle-aged man named Jerry Dineen of Inchees (whom I knew well) went up for the night with...” CBÉ 0608 Lore 1939
(no title) “A young man named Ned Sweeney died about a month ago. I heard this day that his first cousin is feeling very...” CBÉ 0608 Lore 1939
(no title) “When people here find occasion to speak of a dead person, they pray for his soul.” CBÉ 0608 Lore 1939
(no title) “I remember my mother telling of a dream she had about an awful big coffin.” CBÉ 0608 Lore 1939
(no title) “I had once the distinction of having been mistaken for one of the Good People without having the slightest intention of representing myself as one of them.” CBÉ 0608 Lore 1939
(no title) “My grandmother could speak Irish as fluently as English and she was deeply versed in ancient lore. ” CBÉ 0608 Lore 1939
(no title) “The celebrated Mary Doyle, local ambassador to fairy-land, who was consulted in all cases of serious diseases...” CBÉ 0608 Lore 1939
(no title) “I got the following story from a woman in Kilgarvan some years ago. I'll re-tell it here in the way the old people would do it...” CBÉ 0608 Lore 1939
(no title) “There was a family living in Lomanaugh, too, but because some of their descendants still live there and are close relations and friends of my own...” CBÉ 0608 Lore 1939
(no title) “By far the most romantic figure among the charm workers was Pahd Bwee (Lynch), a wandering musician who flourished in these valleys some fifty years ago or more.” CBÉ 0608 Lore 1939
(no title) “There is a field in a neighbour's farm near us and it goes by the very poetic name of Gaurdeen Owen na Knapee Bawn.” CBÉ 0608 Lore 1939