Notebooks

Categories

Artefact and dress

  1. !kuppen (imitation of the sound of horses)
  2. !nanni's father's dress
  3. A drum
  4. A necklace of reed used to cure a little child's cold
  5. Arrow-making
  6. Arrowheads
  7. Cutting with stone knives
  8. Digging sticks used by men
  9. Dorothea Bleek - Book BC151_A3_018
  10. Dorothea Bleek - Book BC151_A3_019
  11. Dorothea Bleek - Book BC151_A3_029
  12. Dorothea Bleek - Book BC151_A3_030
  13. Elephants (eating their hearts)
  14. Feathered arrows and poison
  15. Grass in Bushmanland that resembles brushes
  16. Heron's song (The song of the Blue Crane)
  17. Horns burnt for rain
  18. How an Elephant steals a young Springbok from |kaggen (the Mantis) or Pet Springbok carried off by an Elephant
  19. How the prepared springbok's ears are tied on
  20. Huts
  21. Jewellery and ornaments worn by women
  22. Karosses must not be beaten upon the ground, for fear of bad consequences
  23. Making fire with two pieces of sticks; and tinder-making
  24. Mat sieves
  25. Names and descriptions of bags, nets and things worn
  26. Notes on chippings, or, Chipping no. 4
  27. Notes on rock painting copy no. 2 (!nu'sa and other groups)
  28. Notes on rock painting copy no. 5, no. 6. and no. 7
  29. Notes on rock painting copy no. 8: the rain and the rain-bull
  30. Pieces of wood for divining, or |xu
  31. Poisons and a description of gathering them
  32. Pots and trading
  33. Quagga makes flour
  34. Skinning and cutting
  35. Story of the Moon and the Hare: a version by ≠kasin
  36. Tactics in springbok hunting
  37. The !au or shaped rib-bone used by Bushmen in eating some kinds of food
  38. The !k'anni is an ornament worn by men and women
  39. The !nabbe
  40. The Korannas brought guns (while they felt that they had not a little cattle)
  41. The adhesive substance (|kwae) used in arrowmaking and its preparation for use
  42. The eating of jackal
  43. The making of a needle from a springbok's foreleg
  44. The making of clay pots
  45. The marking of arrows
  46. The old clay pot
  47. The pieces of wood used by the Bushmen of !nanni's country for divining future events
  48. The piercing of ears
  49. The power of cutting possessed by the reed and quartz
  50. The preparation of the drum; ears of springbok are tied to the feet of the men who dance
  51. The preparation of the springbok's ears
  52. The preparation of tinder from a certain thorn tree
  53. The use of the !goin-!goin, followed by an account of a Bushman dance
  54. The woman who was killed by the Baboons
  55. The |khu or Bushman soup-spoon
  56. The ||kuken
  57. The ||kuken and ostrich feathers
  58. The |ßkururu (|xabbe, or 'Kritje')
  59. Tools: a note
  60. Veldschoen
  61. Veldschoen
  62. What the people eat and wear (the Anteater's laws) (||kabbo's version 2)
  63. Words and sentences: given by Tamme
  64. ||kurru, or ||kutten-||kutten (making weapons)

Celestial bodies and aeroscopy

  1. !gaunu
  2. A note on the First Bushmen
  3. A prayer addressed to the Moon, and another version of the Moon and Hare story
  4. A small insect called !ka !karro, said to resemble the Moon, used by Bushmen women to ascertain if the men will bring food home
  5. A song sung by the star !gaunu, especially by the Bushman women
  6. A story about another Star
  7. A white substance and the Moon
  8. About the Daybreak Star
  9. Address or prayer to the star Canopus and the star Sirius
  10. Aquilae's water
  11. Burial (another account)
  12. Children throwing up the Sun (in this dialect)
  13. Clouds and wind
  14. Cuts to be made on a bow when a baboon has been killed
  15. Day's Heart
  16. Dia!kwain plays the bow in a thunderstorm, or, The thunderstorm
  17. Eclipse of the sun
  18. Falling stars
  19. Falling stars
  20. Fragment of the story of the old woman sending the children to throw up the sleeping Sun into the sky (given by Blaitje Snell)
  21. How Xaa-ttin asked (or prayed to) the dead magician (named !nuin-|kui-ten) for rain, which was speedily bestowed
  22. Jantje Tooren told by his father not to look towards the Moon as it comes out
  23. Moon and Hare: the origin of death
  24. Moon and Sun and Hares
  25. Moon and little Hare (includes: The Moon's speech)
  26. Moon and stars: an incantation
  27. More about the Day's Heart star: what he says to his daughter
  28. Names for the star Canopus
  29. Names of stars
  30. Names of stars: given by ≠kasin and Dia!kwain
  31. Prayer to a star
  32. Prayer to the young moon
  33. Prayers to the Moon
  34. Rainmaking, when the wind is in the north
  35. Sirius and Canopus
  36. Some of the stars (their names)
  37. Stars
  38. Stars
  39. Stars and flowers
  40. Stars and game
  41. Story of the Moon and the Hare: a version at first by ≠kasin and then by Dia!kwain
  42. Story of the Moon and the Hare: a version by Dia!kwain
  43. Story of the Moon and the Hare: a version by ≠kasin
  44. Sun and Moon story
  45. Sun, Moon and stars
  46. Sun, Moon, and stars
  47. The !ho
  48. The !kh'o: a blue mist which resembles smoke
  49. The Day's Heart star
  50. The Day's Heart star child
  51. The Lion becomes a star
  52. The Lion star
  53. The Lion star and other stars
  54. The Mantis makes an eland
  55. The Mantis, his wife and their things
  56. The Moon
  57. The Moon and Sun (another version of The Sun which pierces the Moon with its knife by ||kabbo)
  58. The Moon and the Hare (origin of death)
  59. The Moon and the Hare and |xue
  60. The Moon becomes angry at the children's laughing at him: an explanation of the eclipse of the moon
  61. The Moon not to be laughed at
  62. The Moon pierced by the Sun
  63. The Moon seeking his wife, ||ko'on
  64. The Moon, not to be looked at, when game is shot
  65. The Sun pierces the full Moon with his knife
  66. The children of the First Bushmen (who preceded the Flat Bushmen in their country) throw up the sleeping Sun into the sky, or, The children of the !khwe |na ssho !ke, ordered by their mothers, throw the sleeping Sun into the sky (a second version of the story)
  67. The crying of the wind tells beasts of prey where to find people
  68. The east wind
  69. The girl who made the Milky Way, by throwing ashes into the sky
  70. The great Star !gaunu, which singing named the stars
  71. The hare and the moon
  72. The moon and the hare
  73. The moon, the sun and the stars
  74. The name of a star in the Katkop dialect: the Hare's star
  75. The new maiden who threw !huin into the sky; which became stars, and the wood ashes which were upon it, the Milky Way
  76. The north wind
  77. The origin of the Moon
  78. The south wind
  79. The story of !ko'-g !nuin-tara, or, !ko'-g !nuin-tara and the Day's Heart star
  80. The two Lions: pointers to the Southern Cross
  81. The west wind
  82. The |kaggen who took |kammanga's shoe, and turned it into an eland
  83. Want of rain
  84. What is done by the Bushmen (men and women) in an eclipse of the sun
  85. What the 'Bushman rice' does when the ||xo hai stars come out
  86. What the children say to the Moon as it rises making it angry
  87. What the stars say
  88. Wind and stars
  89. Wind, weather and springbok hunting
  90. Words and sentences (including the names of stars)
  91. Young moon's story
  92. |kaggen (the Mantis) and the Moon (version 1)
  93. |kaggen (the Mantis) and the Moon: creation of the latter (version 2)
  94. |xannan |xannan
  95. |xannan |xannan and the wind
  96. ≠nabbe ta !nu (Corona Australis)

Custom and daily life

  1. !gaunu
  2. !guerriten-dde
  3. !gweh or Malkop Gift (poisons)
  4. !haken, a food resembling 'Bushman rice'
  5. !kuppen (imitation of the sound of horses)
  6. !nana-an: the custom of calling to the wounded springbok
  7. !nanna-sse
  8. !nanna-sse (hunting observances)
  9. !nanni's drawing of the |kui
  10. !nu !numma-!kuiten
  11. !nuin-|kui-ten (who was a sorcerer or magician)
  12. A Bushman belief about a moth called |goro, the coming of which to the fire at night foretells the slaying of an ostrich (or the finding of ostrich eggs) by one of the men
  13. A certain snake, which, by lying upon its back, announces a death in the family; and must not, in these circumstances, be killed
  14. A fragment about the animal clicks, and ways of speaking |xam
  15. A fragment of an account of a ceremony performed by Bushman maidens in order that their father's dogs should hunt well
  16. A fragment of the story of the early morning
  17. A girl does not eat porcupines' tails
  18. A great Bushman doctress and sorceress Ttanno !khauken who did not understand Dutch
  19. A lion's story, or, The child who saved her sleeping parents from the lion
  20. A man is wounded by another by accident when out after springbok
  21. A man respects his wife's mother
  22. A mother's prohibitions with regard to the hartebeest and her child
  23. A necklace of reed used to cure a little child's cold
  24. A note about the porcupine
  25. A person who takes snuff: tobacco eats up his brains
  26. A presentiment
  27. A root used for curing ill people
  28. A small insect called !ka !karro, said to resemble the Moon, used by Bushmen women to ascertain if the men will bring food home
  29. A snake found near a grave
  30. A song of the |kam-ssin !ku (or Sun Bushmen)
  31. A waterpool called |uha
  32. About 'Bushman rice'
  33. About Ssho |oa: where to be found
  34. About locusts
  35. About maidens and how they adorn young men with ||ka or 'rooi klip'
  36. About new maidens (continued from Bleek's Book XXVII: p.2618)
  37. About poison
  38. About snoring
  39. About sorcerers
  40. About sorcerers: their death, their snoring work, earthquakes and the rain
  41. About the 'Toornan': the 'Bushman witchdoctor'
  42. About the lion who carries away and kills a man and the search for the lost man (a story of common life)
  43. Actions after death
  44. An eruptive illness called !hamman-xu
  45. An ignorant man digs up Ssho |oa and the consequences of his actions
  46. An illustration of the use of ddabba-i
  47. An ostrich eggshell, left open, will attract snakes
  48. An owl believed to foretell the coming of the lion
  49. Animals eaten by the !kun
  50. Arrow-making
  51. Arrowheads
  52. Avoidance behaviour relating to lions
  53. Avoiding where the jackal or the hyena have passed water
  54. Baboon's ss'o |a and hair used as charms against illness
  55. Baboons and the ≠gebbi-ggu
  56. Baboons dance the ≠gebbi-ggu
  57. Baboons know our names
  58. Baboons should not be spoken with
  59. Baboons speak Bushman, and have wives
  60. Baboons try to shoot people - means of preventing It
  61. Beating a stone on the ground
  62. Birds and bird's eggs
  63. Birds await the death of a thing
  64. Bloodletting
  65. Burial
  66. Burial (another account)
  67. Burial; also avenging a death
  68. Butterflies and !giten
  69. Certain kinds of food, said not to be eaten by adults
  70. Children do not eat jackal's hearts
  71. Children do not say the lion's name at night
  72. Chippings made by Dia!kwain's father (before the time of the 'Boers')
  73. Clouds and wind
  74. Concerning apparitions (or How, when the first wife of Dia!kwain was buried, those returning to their homes saw the apparition of a little child)
  75. Crows and a note on secretary birds
  76. Curing illness (and the trance dance)
  77. Cursing
  78. Custom observed with Bushman children, when too young to walk
  79. Customs at death
  80. Cuts to be made on a bow when a baboon has been killed
  81. Cuts to be made on a bow when a hyena has been killed
  82. Dead people are those who rode the Rain
  83. Destroying the sneeze or kkoroken
  84. Dia!kwain explains his mother's 'little name'
  85. Difference between |xam and European methods of articulation
  86. Digging for porcupine
  87. Digging sticks used by men
  88. Distribution of porcupine meat
  89. Doings of the Mantis when the eland has been wounded
  90. Doings of the springbok and springbok hunting
  91. Dorothea Bleek - Book BC151_A3_004
  92. Dorothea Bleek - Book BC151_A3_010
  93. Dorothea Bleek - Book BC151_A3_011
  94. Dorothea Bleek - Book BC151_A3_012
  95. Dorothea Bleek - Book BC151_A3_013
  96. Dorothea Bleek - Book BC151_A3_015
  97. Dorothea Bleek - Book BC151_A3_016
  98. Dorothea Bleek - Book BC151_A3_017
  99. Dorothea Bleek - Book BC151_A3_018
  100. Dorothea Bleek - Book BC151_A3_019
  101. Dorothea Bleek - Book BC151_A3_020
  102. Dorothea Bleek - Book BC151_A3_021
  103. Dorothea Bleek - Book BC151_A3_022
  104. Dorothea Bleek - Book BC151_A3_023
  105. Dorothea Bleek - Book BC151_A3_027
  106. Dorothea Bleek - Book BC151_A3_028
  107. Dorothea Bleek - Book BC151_A3_029
  108. Dorothea Bleek - Book BC151_A3_030
  109. Dress after death
  110. Dust signals, or, A man who becomes faint from the heat of the sun on his way home, throws up earth into the air, so that those at home may see the dust, and come to help him
  111. Earthquake
  112. Eating hare's meat
  113. Eating the springbok's tongue-tip
  114. Edible plants found near water
  115. Elephants (eating their hearts)
  116. Explanation of !hau-!hau (a hunting charm)
  117. Explanation of Mr G. Stow's pictures: 1 (habits of the hunting leopard)
  118. Explanation of Mr G. Stow's pictures: no. 2
  119. Falling stars
  120. Falling stars
  121. Feathered arrows and poison
  122. Flat Bushmen's' poison
  123. Food eaten by Bushmen (five types of berries and roots)
  124. Food eaten by the !kun
  125. Food eaten by the !kun
  126. Food of the Bushmen, found in their country
  127. Food that ≠kasin says he does not eat
  128. Further ceremonies in cutting up eland
  129. Further particulars regarding the purification or cleansing (|koa)
  130. Gambro or |kui and its ill-effects
  131. Gargling
  132. Gemsbok hunting
  133. Grass in Bushmanland that resembles brushes
  134. Greetings among the Bushmen (and times of the day)
  135. Habits of jackals
  136. Habits of porcupines
  137. Hai ||umm
  138. Healers (sorcerers) and the ||ken dance
  139. Horns burnt for rain
  140. How Korannas and the |xam cut themselves in order to shoot well
  141. How an owl (by its conduct) made |a-kkumm think that danger must be at hand and how she was sought for by a lion, which spoke to her in a man's voice
  142. How children are carried
  143. How the Bushman women show their admiration for the horse
  144. How the approach of a commando is foretold by the mist
  145. How the brother of the maiden taken up in a whirlwind became the Porcupine; followed by various remarks about porcupines
  146. How the prepared springbok's ears are tied on
  147. How to get rid of the evil influence of bad dreams
  148. How women fear the new Ssho |oa which has just been brought home
  149. Hunting animals with dogs
  150. Hunting hare
  151. Hunting hares
  152. Huts
  153. Jackal clouds
  154. Jan Plat's aunt Natta sang the ≠gebbi-ggu
  155. Jantje Tooren told by his father not to look towards the Moon as it comes out
  156. Karosses must not be beaten upon the ground, for fear of bad consequences
  157. Killing a wife by means of a poisoned arrow in her bed
  158. Leopard hunting: the fatal adventure of !kwai-!kwa and his companion, and advice about leopard-hunting
  159. Life after death
  160. Lion eats all things
  161. Lions
  162. Making fire with two pieces of sticks; and tinder-making
  163. Manner of carrying firewood
  164. Mat sieves
  165. Means of defending a dog from baboons
  166. Medicines taken by the ill
  167. Men who run away fear greatly (on courage and cowardice)
  168. Method of cooking and eating porcupine
  169. Missing the game
  170. Mixing arrow poisons
  171. Mode of addressing rain
  172. Mode of eating porcupine
  173. Moons' (months) possess their names
  174. More about sorcerers
  175. More about the Day's Heart star: what he says to his daughter
  176. Moths coming to the fire of Bushmen by night foretell the killing of certain kinds of game
  177. Mr G. Stow's picture no. 3 (the ||ken dance)
  178. Names and descriptions of bags, nets and things worn
  179. Names for certain winds
  180. Names of plants and animals and notes on their use
  181. Names of seasons
  182. Names of stars: given by ≠kasin and Dia!kwain
  183. Note on lizards
  184. Notes (to Children do not eat jackal's hearts)
  185. Notes on chippings, or, Chipping no. 4
  186. Notes on rock painting copy no. 2 (!nu'sa and other groups)
  187. Notes on rock painting copy no. 3
  188. Notes on rock painting copy no. 5, no. 6. and no. 7
  189. Notes on rock painting copy no. 9
  190. Old woman's song (2nd version)
  191. On the 'Children of shortness' (the 'Grass Bushmen')
  192. On women's hunting or |kua
  193. Ostriches and barter
  194. Parents instruct children how to get food, or, How D.H's father and mother instructed their children to get food
  195. Parts of the ostrich not to be eaten by children
  196. People fear the darkness's rain
  197. Picture of Mr Orpen's
  198. Pieces of wood for divining, or |xu
  199. Poison of the puffadder
  200. Poisons and a description of gathering them
  201. Porcupine hunting
  202. Porcupine hunting
  203. Porcupine hunting: we go to sit waiting for a porcupine and some of the habits of the porcupine
  204. Prayers to the Moon
  205. Purification after shooting a person
  206. Rain washes out a dead man's footsteps
  207. Regarding houses
  208. Relationships
  209. Remarks concerning copies of Bushman pictures nos. I-XXIV Collected By Mr H.C. Schunke, and deposited in the Grey Library
  210. Respect for the mantis
  211. Respecting and eating the |no
  212. Respecting the eland
  213. Salutations to the sun and greetings to others
  214. Seeking springbok
  215. Signs made on leaving a place
  216. Sitting in the shade
  217. Skinning and cutting
  218. Sleeping in ashes
  219. Snakes and spirits of the dead
  220. Sneezing
  221. Sneezing: and searching for wives and families
  222. Sneezing: to be avoided when game is shot
  223. Song of the !kan ||ka ||karashe
  224. Song of the sho sho
  225. Sorcerers are like lions
  226. Sorcerers shoot with invisible arrows, causing illness
  227. Springbok bones
  228. Springbok hunting
  229. Springbok possess magic arrows
  230. Ssa ka Kumm (the eland's story)
  231. Ssauken (a game)
  232. Ssho |oa or ||karruken-||karruken or |u ssho a
  233. Stars and death
  234. Stars and game
  235. Story of the Moon and the Hare: a version by ≠kasin
  236. Story of ≠kasin's hunting adventures
  237. Swallows
  238. Tactics in springbok hunting
  239. Tamme's family and their understanding of the languages spoken in their country
  240. Terms of relationship
  241. The !au or shaped rib-bone used by Bushmen in eating some kinds of food
  242. The !gixa (sorcerer) |kaunu
  243. The !ho
  244. The !ho and Ko-boken
  245. The !kabbi: a bird which has white legs and is eaten
  246. The !kh'o: a blue mist which resembles smoke
  247. The Brachycerus used as a means of cure for little children; the same insect not used again when another child is ill
  248. The Bushmen's presentiments of things that are going to happen
  249. The Ichneumon's discourse to the Mantis
  250. The Mantis and the hunting of eland
  251. The Moon
  252. The Moon not to be laughed at
  253. The Moon, not to be looked at, when game is shot
  254. The Phyllomorpha paradoxa (or withered-leaf insect)
  255. The Water's story: more about how maidens adorn young men
  256. The adhesive substance (|kwae) used in arrowmaking and its preparation for use
  257. The adventure of |khui- |a with a family of baboons
  258. The advice that Dia!kwain's mother gave him about the tortoise, i.e. that he must not leave one, if he saw it, but must take it home
  259. The approach of strangers makes Bushmen sleepy
  260. The avoidance of the name of the lion
  261. The children taught to use another name for the lion
  262. The collecting of ostrich eggs
  263. The coming of the Mantis [the mantis] to sit upon the quiver of the Bushman father at home foretells the shooting of a hartebeest
  264. The consequences of a woman's smelling fresh Ssho |oa scent
  265. The crying of the wind is an evil omen
  266. The crying of the wind tells beasts of prey where to find people
  267. The cutting and piercing of parts of the body
  268. The digging out of 'Bushman rice'
  269. The dream
  270. The drought which caused |han≠kass'o's grandparents to starve
  271. The east wind
  272. The eating of baboons
  273. The eating of jackal
  274. The effect of a new maiden's gaze
  275. The explanation of the name Ssu-!kui-ten-tta (or Snore-White-Lying)
  276. The father-in-law and the mother-in-law
  277. The giving of nicknames
  278. The hartebeest and the eland belong to the Mantis
  279. The hunting, preparation and eating of ostrich, 'chiansbok', springbok, khoran, hare and jackal
  280. The hyena
  281. The little porcupine
  282. The locust bird or ||kerri
  283. The lynx; its flesh eaten by Bushmen, but not by the Bushman women; the manner of hunting it, etc.
  284. The making of a needle from a springbok's foreleg
  285. The making of clay pots
  286. The man carries away the ostrich to his home
  287. The manner in which a man who is being cleansed, is prepared for drinking water
  288. The manner of dividing fat
  289. The marking of arrows
  290. The names of a few places in Bushmanland, told to me long ago by Jantje Tooren and put in here for safety
  291. The names of animals
  292. The new maiden who ate the ostrich marrow from the thigh-bone of the ostrich without the knowledge of her people
  293. The north wind
  294. The old clay pot
  295. The old woman and the hyena (|a!kunta's version which he heard from his mother)
  296. The old woman and the hyena (||kabbo's version)
  297. The owl and the black crow
  298. The pieces of wood used by the Bushmen of !nanni's country for divining future events
  299. The piercing of ears
  300. The place to which people go after death, and various ways of dying and being killed
  301. The power over ostriches possessed by Dia!kwain's uncle, |uherre or 'Blaitje'
  302. The preparation of feather brushes used in springbok hunting
  303. The preparation of the drum; ears of springbok are tied to the feet of the men who dance
  304. The preparation of the springbok's ears
  305. The rain sorcerer ||kunn; two of ||kunn's children
  306. The rainmaker ||kunn
  307. The slaying of a white springbok will cause the other springbok to disappear
  308. The song of the !ke tsa'ba (a bird)
  309. The song of the !korro-ssin !ku (or Pit-making Bushmen)
  310. The song of the Mother Rhinoceros
  311. The south wind
  312. The spider
  313. The springbok's story
  314. The story of the Lions and the Ostriches
  315. The story of the widow of the man killed while hunting, and her return to her own family or The widow's story
  316. The tale of a wise person or sorceress, what she said, when she talked with us
  317. The telephonus (!koroken !koroken)
  318. The treatment of the 'growing' girl
  319. The treatment of thieves
  320. The use of the !goin-!goin, followed by an account of a Bushman dance
  321. The west wind
  322. The widow married by her dead husband's next brother
  323. The woman eaten by Baboons: a fragment of the account
  324. The young man who was changed into stone, by the glance of a new maiden
  325. The |goo or ≠gebbi-gu
  326. The |ka kau: a little bird said by the Bushmen, by whom it is not eaten, to laugh at the wildcat
  327. The |khoro and the ≠gue-||na
  328. The |nu'she, the tt' e, and the wind and rain
  329. The |u' ||ke' or Tshaka
  330. The |xam and the hyena
  331. The ||kauru-opua, or little water-hole found in rock or stone
  332. The ||kerri: a bird which eats locusts; and locust-hunting
  333. The ||kuken
  334. The ||kuken and ostrich feathers
  335. The |ßkururu (|xabbe, or 'Kritje')
  336. Things eaten by the !kun
  337. Throwing stones at locusts
  338. Told in illustration of the picture of the dance of sorcerers (Mr Stow's number 8 and 9)
  339. Tools: a note
  340. Trading with the Makoba and elephant tusks
  341. Treatment of bones
  342. Treatment of the old
  343. Tsatsi's treatment of bones
  344. Tto, 'rooi klip' (how tto is obtained)
  345. Unsuccessful springbok hunting after death of companion (means employed to make it more fortunate)
  346. Various foods and the protection of the rain for a fungus
  347. Water and wells
  348. We do not utter a star man's name
  349. What !nanni's father told him (what to eat and avoid)
  350. What Xaa-ttin used to sing (the broken string)
  351. What bow strings are made of
  352. What happens when we die
  353. What is done by the Bushmen (men and women) in an eclipse of the sun
  354. What is done with a 'new' maiden
  355. What is said to a person whose actions are disagreeable
  356. What sorcerers eat
  357. What the lion did to Xwerri-kau; and what parts of game should not be eaten by little children
  358. What the lion says
  359. What the man does and says to the new Ssho |oa so that it may know him
  360. What the man says while cleansing himself
  361. What the people eat and wear (the Anteater's laws) (||kabbo's version 2)
  362. What the springbok and the gemsbok did when they knew that Dia!kwain's wife would die
  363. What |kaggen does when an eland has been shot
  364. When a good-looking person is ill
  365. When a man's flesh moves
  366. Why !kweiten ta ||ken received her name
  367. Why Dia!kwain's brother Ko-bbo received his name
  368. Why Dia!kwain's uncle |kai kwa received his name
  369. Wind, weather and springbok hunting
  370. Windmaking and springbok hunting
  371. Words and sentences (and Dia!kwain's father's drawings)
  372. Words and sentences: given by !nanni and Tamme in Mowbray
  373. Words and sentences: given by Tamme
  374. Words and sentences: given by Tamme
  375. Words and sentences: plants and animals
  376. Words and sentences: plants and animals
  377. Words and sentences: plants and animals
  378. Words and sentences: plants and animals (and avoiding the lion's name)
  379. Words and sentences: things belonging to different peoples in !nanni and Tamme's country, and plants and trees
  380. Words and sentences: times, country and language
  381. Young moon's story
  382. |kai ka !gaoken, a poison used by 'Grass Bushmen'
  383. |nu-!ke or magicians who have died still possess power, and ≠kamme-an's prayer to them
  384. |u' ||ke' in food
  385. |xue, ||namme, and the |nani, or, The |nani
  386. ||gan-a (spirits or dreams)
  387. ||hara and Tto
  388. ||kabbo tells of death, the hole, and the path of the First Bushmen
  389. ||kabbo's place
  390. ||kabbo's treatment of bones
  391. ||kurru, or ||kutten-||kutten (making weapons)
  392. ≠kasin's adventure with a leopard

Healing and ailing

  1. !gaunu
  2. A great Bushman doctress and sorceress Ttanno !khauken who did not understand Dutch
  3. A necklace of reed used to cure a little child's cold
  4. A root used for curing ill people
  5. About Ssho |oa: where to be found
  6. About snoring
  7. About sorcerers
  8. About sorcerers: their death, their snoring work, earthquakes and the rain
  9. About the 'Toornan': the 'Bushman witchdoctor'
  10. About the sorceress !kwarra-an
  11. An eruptive illness called !hamman-xu
  12. An ignorant man digs up Ssho |oa and the consequences of his actions
  13. Avoiding where the jackal or the hyena have passed water
  14. Butterflies and !giten
  15. Curing illness (and the trance dance)
  16. Custom observed with Bushman children, when too young to walk
  17. Dorothea Bleek - Book BC151_A3_016
  18. Dorothea Bleek - Book BC151_A3_018
  19. Dorothea Bleek - Book BC151_A3_019
  20. Dorothea Bleek - Book BC151_A3_022
  21. Healers (sorcerers) and the ||ken dance
  22. How a lion carried off ≠kasin's eldest brother and wounded his father
  23. Jacob Nein and the leopard
  24. Medicines taken by the ill
  25. More about |xue
  26. Mr G. Stow's picture no. 3 (the ||ken dance)
  27. Poison of the puffadder
  28. Sorcerers are like lions
  29. Sorcerers shoot with invisible arrows, causing illness
  30. Springbok possess magic arrows
  31. Ssho |oa or ||karruken-||karruken or |u ssho a
  32. The 'Bushman doctor'
  33. The Brachycerus used as a means of cure for little children; the same insect not used again when another child is ill
  34. The Mantis turned into a hartebeest
  35. The dream
  36. The explanation of the name Ssu-!kui-ten-tta (or Snore-White-Lying)
  37. The spider
  38. The story of a sorceress; that which she did when the Kafir had hurt my throat, she 'snored' me, when my throat was swollen
  39. The story of |kuken-|u |unu
  40. The tale of a wise person or sorceress, what she said, when she talked with us
  41. Visit to Dr Stewart
  42. What sorcerers eat
  43. When a good-looking person is ill
  44. Xurri ko killed by a lion
  45. ||kabbo's maternal grandmother, who was a !gixa

History (Early Race)

  1. !kotta-kkoe, his brother, ostrich eggs and Korannas
  2. !yoa-ka-ttu, the Blue Crane and the girls
  3. A fragment of a story about Lions and Jackals
  4. A further explanation of the ratel (or Mellivora): why it is like a man
  5. A man falls upon the Lion
  6. A man falls upon the Lion
  7. A man is wounded by another by accident when out after springbok
  8. A note on the First Bushmen
  9. About a moth called by the Bushmen !num-!num and said to pour lice upon them
  10. Baboons and quagga are people
  11. Baboons and the ≠gebbi-ggu
  12. Baboons who ate human beings
  13. Beasts of prey were once people
  14. Black Crow calling Jackal
  15. Crows and a note on secretary birds
  16. Ddi xerreten and the Lioness
  17. Description of the ≠nerru
  18. Eating hare's meat
  19. End of Moon and Hare story
  20. Fragment of a story about the old man, the little Hare and the travelling Lions
  21. Fragment of the story of the old woman sending the children to throw up the sleeping Sun into the sky (given by Blaitje Snell)
  22. Further details of Men who hunted lions with bones
  23. Game once tame: why it grew wild
  24. Heron's song (The song of the Blue Crane)
  25. How the !gabbaken-!gabbaken (the Mason Wasp) punished his wife for making personal remarks
  26. How the Jackal deceived the Hyena
  27. Koranna commando destroyed by ||ua
  28. Leopards and jackals
  29. Lion and Fieldmouse
  30. Lion and Tortoise
  31. Lion turns into a man
  32. Mat sieves
  33. Men who hunted lions with bones
  34. Note on the two Lions
  35. Old woman's song (2nd version)
  36. Quagga makes flour
  37. Remarks by |han≠kass'o on the preceding story (The death of the !kau)
  38. Resurrection of the He-Ostrich
  39. Song of the !kau's child
  40. Stones which kill the thrower
  41. Story of the Lion and the Jackals
  42. Story of the Lion and the Jackals: another translation which is a little different
  43. Story of the Moon and the Hare and how the Moon punished the Hare
  44. Story of the Moon and the Hare: a version by Dia!kwain
  45. Story of |kua ka khumm
  46. The !gwiten who was niggardly to his wife
  47. The !kain who snatched off the hair of the Ostrich's head, and put it on his own head
  48. The !kau who brought home his own flesh as food
  49. The !khau carried off by a Lion
  50. The !koa (or Muishond)
  51. The Anteater's laws (|a!kunta's version)
  52. The Anteater's laws (||kabbo's version 2)
  53. The Anteater's story, or, The Anteater, Springbok, Lynx and Partridge
  54. The Anteater, Springbok and Lynx (||kabbo's version 1)
  55. The Anteater, Springbok and Lynx (||kabbo's version 2)
  56. The Anteater, the young Springbok, the Lynx and the Partridge
  57. The Blue Crane and the girls (including the Blue Crane's speech)
  58. The Crow's story: the Crows are sent out to search for husbands, or, The !kagen ka Kkomm's story and the |hunn ta kkomm's story (including What happened when the !kagen found the missing men, p.3995)
  59. The Day's Heart star
  60. The Hare, |xue, the Antelope and the Bushman: a creation legend
  61. The Hyena and the Lion (1st version)
  62. The Hyena's revenge
  63. The Jackal and the Porcupine
  64. The Jackal's speech, or, the Jackals and a springbok which the Hyena takes away from them
  65. The Korannas brought guns (while they felt that they had not a little cattle)
  66. The Korhaan marries his elder sister (the Anteater's laws) (||kabbo's version 2)
  67. The Lion and the Muishond (continued from The two Lions: pointers to the Southern Cross)
  68. The Lion and the Tortoise (continued from The two Lions: pointers to the Southern Cross)
  69. The Lion and the man's story; what the Lion formerly did to the man or The young man of the Ancient Race, who was carried off by a Lion, when asleep in the field
  70. The Lion becomes a star
  71. The Lion's story
  72. The Lion's story, or, The Lion and the Hyena
  73. The Lions, the Tortoise, the little Hare and the old woman
  74. The Moon and Sun (another version of The Sun which pierces the Moon with its knife by ||kabbo)
  75. The Moon and the Hare (origin of death)
  76. The Moon becomes angry at the children's laughing at him: an explanation of the eclipse of the moon
  77. The Quagga who was poisoned by her husband, !kuin'ssi-|kauoken
  78. The Quagga's story
  79. The Rain, in the form of an eland, shot by one of the Early Race of people; and the disasters which followed
  80. The Ratel and the girls of the Early Race
  81. The She-Rhinoceros and her elder daughter's suitors
  82. The Vultures and their elder sister
  83. The Wind
  84. The Xara and the Ichneumon
  85. The children are sent to throw the sleeping Sun into the sky
  86. The children of the First Bushmen (who preceded the Flat Bushmen in their country) throw up the sleeping Sun into the sky, or, The children of the !khwe |na ssho !ke, ordered by their mothers, throw the sleeping Sun into the sky (a second version of the story)
  87. The death of the !kau (a lizard of the genus Agama)
  88. The doings of the jackals
  89. The escape of |kannan from the Koranna commando
  90. The girl of the Early Race who killed the children of the Rain
  91. The girl who made locusts
  92. The girl who made the Milky Way, by throwing ashes into the sky
  93. The girl, of the Early Race of people, who married a Baboon
  94. The hare and the moon
  95. The maiden who was taken up in a whirlwind by the agency of the angry Rain and became a great snake
  96. The man who ordered his wife to cut off his ears
  97. The man who went to sleep when out hunting alone
  98. The moon and the hare
  99. The reason why the ostrich does not click
  100. The sending of the Crows, or, Crows sent out to look for husbands
  101. The son of the Wind
  102. The song of the Mother Rhinoceros
  103. The song of the Springbok mothers
  104. The song of the kwa kwara, or korhaan malkop
  105. The song of the young woman, as she returned home
  106. The story of !gwa !nuntu and the Elephants
  107. The story of !khwe-|na ssho-!kui: the man who took a young Lion, and made use of it as a dog ( a story of the First Bushman)
  108. The story of Tssi-!kuara |hin (the Lioness and her adopted daughter)
  109. The story of the Hyena (the Anteater's laws)
  110. The story of the Hyena and the Lion (2nd version)
  111. The story of the Jackal (the Anteater's laws)
  112. The story of the Kwa-kkwara
  113. The story of the Leopard Tortoise
  114. The story of the Lions and the Ostriches
  115. The story of the Lynx and the Anteater
  116. The story of the Ratel (or Mellivora) and the Waterskilpad
  117. The story of the Silver Jackal (the Anteater's laws)
  118. The story of the Strandwolf and the Aardwolf and how they each marry their own kind (the Anteater's laws)
  119. The story of |gwai (who killed his sister-in-law, and was killed by his brother-in-law)
  120. The story of |kuken-|u |unu
  121. The two Lions, the Lizards, the Blue Crane, the Rhebuck, and the Black Crow
  122. The two Lions: pointers to the Southern Cross
  123. The woman eaten by Baboons: a fragment of the account
  124. The woman who was killed by the Baboons
  125. The young woman who disobeyed her mother, and fell in with the two Lions (!haue ta ≠hou and !gu)
  126. The youth (of the Early Race of people) who warned those at home of the approach of a Koranna commando
  127. The ≠nuturu
  128. What the man did to his wife when she was pregnant
  129. What the people eat and wear (the Anteater's laws) (||kabbo's version 2)
  130. When Bushmen were springbucks and cried
  131. Young man of the Early Race put into a mouse skin and becomes a lion
  132. ||kabbo tells of death, the hole, and the path of the First Bushmen
  133. ≠kagara and !haunu
  134. ≠kainyatara and the Ostrich
  135. ≠nerru and her husband

History (personal)

  1. !guerriten-dde
  2. !kaua doro and the lion
  3. !khannumup (or Petros Willems): his personal history
  4. !nanni's father's dress
  5. !nanni's grandparents
  6. !nanni's uncle
  7. !nauxa (or Willem) at the Museum, 24 September 1880
  8. !nuin-|kui-ten (who was a sorcerer or magician)
  9. !xen and the steenbok
  10. A few words, names, etc., obtained from Blaitje Snell and Daoud Moos (chiefly the former); from Stuurman's, and Thier Fontein
  11. A great Bushman doctress and sorceress Ttanno !khauken who did not understand Dutch
  12. A photograph of Xu gwai reminding |han≠kass'o of !nwa !koro
  13. A review on the parade
  14. About Dia!kwain's relations
  15. About the sorceress !kwarra-an
  16. At Breakwater, 17 April 1880
  17. Baboons and ||xabbiten ||xabbiten
  18. Baboons take a child
  19. Beating a stone on the ground
  20. Beetje, daughter of !kweintu
  21. Bushman genealogies
  22. Bushman groups
  23. Butterflies and !giten
  24. Chippings made by Dia!kwain's father (before the time of the 'Boers')
  25. Concerning apparitions (or How, when the first wife of Dia!kwain was buried, those returning to their homes saw the apparition of a little child)
  26. Concerning different Bushmen
  27. Concerning places and topographical features in |han≠kass'o's country; his father-in-law's place is ||gubbo
  28. Customs at death
  29. Da: his capture and the death of his parents
  30. Details about various people known by |han≠kass'o
  31. Dia!kwain explains his mother's 'little name'
  32. Dia!kwain plays the bow in a thunderstorm, or, The thunderstorm
  33. Dia!kwain's explanation of the name which his mother gave him
  34. Dia!kwain's relations
  35. Different peoples and Bushmen in !nanni and Tamme's country
  36. Dirk (!xein, son of Dootje)
  37. Dorothea Bleek - Book BC151_A3_001
  38. Dorothea Bleek - Book BC151_A3_002
  39. Dorothea Bleek - Book BC151_A3_003
  40. Dorothea Bleek - Book BC151_A3_004
  41. Dorothea Bleek - Book BC151_A3_005
  42. Dorothea Bleek - Book BC151_A3_007
  43. Dorothea Bleek - Book BC151_A3_009
  44. Dorothea Bleek - Book BC151_A3_010
  45. Dorothea Bleek - Book BC151_A3_012
  46. Dorothea Bleek - Book BC151_A3_013
  47. Dorothea Bleek - Book BC151_A3_015
  48. Dorothea Bleek - Book BC151_A3_016
  49. Dorothea Bleek - Book BC151_A3_017
  50. Dorothea Bleek - Book BC151_A3_018
  51. Dorothea Bleek - Book BC151_A3_019
  52. Dorothea Bleek - Book BC151_A3_020
  53. Dorothea Bleek - Book BC151_A3_021
  54. Dorothea Bleek - Book BC151_A3_022
  55. Dorothea Bleek - Book BC151_A3_023
  56. Dorothea Bleek - Book BC151_A3_027
  57. Dorothea Bleek - Book BC151_A3_028
  58. Dorothea Bleek - Book BC151_A3_029
  59. Dorothea Bleek - Book BC151_A3_030
  60. Dorothea Bleek - Book BC151_A3_032
  61. Dreams and rain
  62. Dust signals, or, A man who becomes faint from the heat of the sun on his way home, throws up earth into the air, so that those at home may see the dust, and come to help him
  63. Family trees
  64. Flood at Victoria West
  65. Food that ≠kasin says he does not eat
  66. From 'Jan Plat' at Charlton House, Mowbray
  67. Game once tame: why it grew wild
  68. Genealogical information concerning the family of |han≠kass'o (or Klein Jantje)
  69. Genealogical notes
  70. Genealogies
  71. Genealogies: Ttono wo (who was killed by a rhinoceros)
  72. Hendrik (Ronebout) at Breakwater hospital
  73. How 'Mansse' obtained the name of !kau ||hoan
  74. How Tamme was taken by the Makoba and given to the Ovambo
  75. How Xaa-ttin asked (or prayed to) the dead magician (named !nuin-|kui-ten) for rain, which was speedily bestowed
  76. How a lion carried off ≠kasin's eldest brother and wounded his father
  77. How an owl (by its conduct) made |a-kkumm think that danger must be at hand and how she was sought for by a lion, which spoke to her in a man's voice
  78. How to get rid of the evil influence of bad dreams
  79. How |han≠kass'o's pet leveret was killed
  80. Hyena and lion
  81. Jackal clouds
  82. Jacob Nein and the leopard
  83. Jan Plat (at Breakwater; looked over later at Mowbray)
  84. Jan Plat's aunt Natta sang the ≠gebbi-ggu
  85. Jan Plat's story about his brother Ruyter
  86. Jan Ronebout or ≠gerri-sse (at Breakwater and later at Mowbray)
  87. Jantje Tooren tells me his dream
  88. Jantje Tooren told by his father not to look towards the Moon as it comes out
  89. Jantje Tooren's asking for thread to sew on his buttons that I gave him
  90. Jemima Bleek's 'Hottentot' interviews, 1879
  91. Karu on |xue
  92. Kki-a-||ken who threw stones at swallows
  93. Klaas Katkop (≠kasin)
  94. Klaas Paai or ≠enn (at Breakwater)
  95. Leopard hunting: the fatal adventure of !kwai-!kwa and his companion, and advice about leopard-hunting
  96. Locust birds
  97. Locusts
  98. Memo for Miss Lloyd' (regarding some personal details of 'Petros Willems' and 'Willem') (a copy)
  99. Mountain 'Bushmen'
  100. Names of !kweiten ta ||ken's relations
  101. Names of friends, relations and fellow prisoners
  102. Names of |han≠kass'o's relations
  103. Names of ≠kasin's father, mother and their children
  104. Note on a certain man
  105. Note on kkuirri-ttu
  106. Notes on rock painting copy no. 2 (!nu'sa and other groups)
  107. Notes on rock painting copy no. 3
  108. Notes to the story of The Wind
  109. Oh old woman! At what place did you grow up?
  110. Oud Bakkis or 'one nose'
  111. Oud Dorntje catches a leopard ('tiger')
  112. Parts of the ostrich not to be eaten by children
  113. People fear the darkness's rain
  114. Personal history of Friedrich Hortnoop
  115. Personal history of Hendrick Beren and some words
  116. Personal history of Jan Plat (he leaves Calvinia with Dia!kwain)
  117. Personal history of prisoners
  118. Personal history of |han≠kass'o
  119. Personal history of ||kabbo
  120. Places of the |xam
  121. Poisons and a description of gathering them
  122. Sirius and Canopus
  123. Sleeping in ashes
  124. Sneezing: and searching for wives and families
  125. Spoken of a parrot in the village of Mowbray
  126. Stoffel's grandmother
  127. Story of ≠kasin's hunting adventures
  128. Swallows
  129. Tamme does not tell about |xue
  130. Tamme's experiences before coming to Mowbray
  131. Tamme's family and their understanding of the languages spoken in their country
  132. Tamme's father
  133. Tamme's grandparents
  134. The !gixa (sorcerer) |kaunu
  135. The !ho and Ko-boken
  136. The 'Bushman doctor'
  137. The Bushman doctress and sorceress Ttanno !khauken
  138. The Hare, |xue, the Antelope and the Bushman: a creation legend
  139. The adventure of a girl, named Ttai-tchuen, with a lioness who had young cubs
  140. The broken string
  141. The calling of Ttuai-an's name
  142. The darkness
  143. The death of an aunt
  144. The death of |kannu the Rain's man who was ||kabbo's person
  145. The death of ||kabbo's brother and sister-in-law
  146. The dream
  147. The dream which Dia!kwain had before he received the tidings of the death of his father
  148. The drought which caused |han≠kass'o's grandparents to starve
  149. The escape of |kannan from the Koranna commando
  150. The explanation of the name Ssu-!kui-ten-tta (or Snore-White-Lying)
  151. The giving of nicknames
  152. The hunting, preparation and eating of ostrich, 'chiansbok', springbok, khoran, hare and jackal
  153. The loss of ||kabbo's tobacco bag, which was stolen by a hungry dog, belonging to !gou !nui, named 'Blom'
  154. The man who sought refuge from the rain in a cave, and found a lion there before him
  155. The names of !nanni's brothers and sisters
  156. The names of !nanni's relations
  157. The names of Tamme's brothers - dead and alive
  158. The names of stones
  159. The occasion on which the story The girl of the Early Race who killed the children of the Rain was related to |han≠kass'o
  160. The personal histories of various people
  161. The power of cutting possessed by the reed and quartz
  162. The power over ostriches possessed by Dia!kwain's uncle, |uherre or 'Blaitje'
  163. The rain sorcerer ||kunn; two of ||kunn's children
  164. The rainmaker ||kunn
  165. The scene of !kaua doro and the lion
  166. The story of a sorceress; that which she did when the Kafir had hurt my throat, she 'snored' me, when my throat was swollen
  167. The tale of a wise person or sorceress, what she said, when she talked with us
  168. The |xam names of some of Mkuan's relations
  169. The ||gaun-a. The Ghost
  170. Things eaten by the !kun
  171. Throwing stones at locusts
  172. Thy name which is a Bushman name, what is it?'
  173. Trading with the Makoba and elephant tusks
  174. Tsatsi
  175. Tsatsi's treatment of bones
  176. Visit to Dr Stewart
  177. Water and wells
  178. What !nanni's father told him (what to eat and avoid)
  179. What Xaa-ttin used to sing (the broken string)
  180. What happened when the thong (with which they were pulling at the Water's Bull) broke or Kko-kkoro's story
  181. What the lion did to Xwerri-kau; and what parts of game should not be eaten by little children
  182. What the springbok and the gemsbok did when they knew that Dia!kwain's wife would die
  183. What ||kabbo said about his intended return home to Bushmanland
  184. Why !kweiten ta ||ken received her name
  185. Why Dia!kwain's brother Ko-bbo received his name
  186. Why Dia!kwain's uncle |kai kwa received his name
  187. Words and sentences (and Dia!kwain's father's drawings)
  188. Words and sentences: Da, May 1880
  189. Words and sentences: Mkuan at the Breakwater
  190. Words and sentences: by !kweiten ta ||ken
  191. Words and sentences: given by Auma (Hottentot, Namaqua and Setschuana)
  192. Words and sentences: given by Tamme
  193. Words and sentences: given by Tamme
  194. Words and sentences: given by ≠girri-sse
  195. Words and sentences: times, country and language
  196. Words and sentences: |uma at Mowbray, May 1880
  197. Xaa-ttin's accident
  198. Xurri ko killed by a lion
  199. | a khumm called by a lion
  200. |a!karaken killed by a lion
  201. |gui-an (Dootje) and her mistress, Trina de Klerk
  202. |han≠kass'o's dream of a gang of prisoners
  203. |uma and Da: the names of their parents
  204. |uma: his capture by the Makoba and his Boer masters
  205. |xam dialects ('Berg Bushmen' and 'River Bed people')
  206. |xam names
  207. |xannan |xannan
  208. |xannan |xannan and the wind
  209. |xui tatin and the dog
  210. |xui tatin's story
  211. ||kabbo ('Oud Jantje Tooren'), a 'Mantis's man'
  212. ||kabbo (Jantje) in the train
  213. ||kabbo's (Jantje's) capture
  214. ||kabbo's account of being caught and brought to the Breakwater
  215. ||kabbo's account of being caught and jailed (2nd version)
  216. ||kabbo's account of meeting with a lion
  217. ||kabbo's dream of rain
  218. ||kabbo's maternal grandmother, who was a !gixa
  219. ||kabbo's song on the loss of his tobacco pouch
  220. ||kabbo's treatment of bones
  221. ||kurru, or ||kutten-||kutten (making weapons)
  222. ||xuobbeten and the lion
  223. ≠kagara's fight with !haunu in the east
  224. ≠kasin shoots a hyena
  225. ≠kasin's adventure with a leopard

New maidens

  1. A fragment of an account of a ceremony performed by Bushman maidens in order that their father's dogs should hunt well
  2. A yet unwritten story, about the Rain and one of the First Bushmen girls carried away by a whirlwind and who became a frog
  3. A young woman of the Early Race of people carried off by the Rain, in the shape of a bull
  4. About maidens and how they adorn young men with ||ka or 'rooi klip'
  5. About new maidens
  6. About new maidens (continued from Bleek's Book XXVII: p.2618)
  7. Men enchanted by new maidens and changed into trees
  8. Stars and death
  9. The Rain's story, and |kannu the waterhole
  10. The Water's story: more about how maidens adorn young men
  11. The effect of a new maiden's gaze
  12. The girl who snaps her fingers at her parents and the rain
  13. The girl, of the Early Race of people, who married a Baboon
  14. The maiden who snaps her fingers at the rain (and causes lightning)
  15. The maiden who was taken up in a whirlwind by the agency of the angry Rain and became a great snake
  16. The maiden's story; the frog's story
  17. The new maiden who ate the ostrich marrow from the thigh-bone of the ostrich without the knowledge of her people
  18. The new maiden who threw !huin into the sky; which became stars, and the wood ashes which were upon it, the Milky Way
  19. The treatment of the 'growing' girl
  20. The young man who was changed into stone, by the glance of a new maiden
  21. Things girls and youths must avoid (the rain's things)
  22. What is done with a 'new' maiden
  23. ≠nabbe ta !nu (Corona Australis)

Plants and animals

  1. !gweh or Malkop Gift (poisons)
  2. !nanni's drawing of the |kui
  3. A Bushman belief about a moth called |goro, the coming of which to the fire at night foretells the slaying of an ostrich (or the finding of ostrich eggs) by one of the men
  4. A belief about the bat and the porcupine
  5. A certain snake, which, by lying upon its back, announces a death in the family; and must not, in these circumstances, be killed
  6. A discussion on the respective understanding and foolishnesses of various animals and some of their doings
  7. A lion's story, or, The child who saved her sleeping parents from the lion
  8. A note about the porcupine
  9. A note on ||kum'm or rain-clouds
  10. A small insect called !ka !karro, said to resemble the Moon, used by Bushmen women to ascertain if the men will bring food home
  11. About 'seacows'
  12. About Ssho |oa: where to be found
  13. About a moth called by the Bushmen !num-!num and said to pour lice upon them
  14. About cattle
  15. About poison
  16. About the fine hearing of the porcupine
  17. About the hartebeest
  18. About the hyena and its doings
  19. About the jackal and its doings
  20. About the korhaan
  21. About the wildebeest
  22. An ignorant man digs up Ssho |oa and the consequences of his actions
  23. Avoidance behaviour relating to lions
  24. Baboon's ss'o |a and hair used as charms against illness
  25. Baboons and quagga are people
  26. Baboons dance the ≠gebbi-ggu
  27. Baboons know our names
  28. Baboons should not be spoken with
  29. Baboons speak Bushman, and have wives
  30. Baboons take a child
  31. Baboons try to shoot people - means of preventing It
  32. Birds and bird's eggs
  33. Birds await the death of a thing
  34. Concerning the |kuken-|u |unu, which is found abundantly, in Bushmanland
  35. Description of animals and their habits
  36. Doings of the springbok and springbok hunting
  37. Edible plants found near water
  38. Explanation of Mr G. Stow's pictures: 1 (habits of the hunting leopard)
  39. Food eaten by Bushmen (five types of berries and roots)
  40. Food eaten by the !kun
  41. Food eaten by the !kun
  42. Grasshoppers
  43. Habits of jackals
  44. Habits of porcupines
  45. How an old woman asked a chameleon for rain
  46. How an owl (by its conduct) made |a-kkumm think that danger must be at hand and how she was sought for by a lion, which spoke to her in a man's voice
  47. How the brother of the maiden taken up in a whirlwind became the Porcupine; followed by various remarks about porcupines
  48. How various mice make their nests
  49. How women fear the new Ssho |oa which has just been brought home
  50. Hyena and lion
  51. Leopards, lions and phrases
  52. Lion and giraffe
  53. Lion eats all things
  54. Lions
  55. Locust birds
  56. Locusts
  57. Locusts
  58. Locusts or ||kabba-|kha
  59. Medicines taken by the ill
  60. More about the Day's Heart star: what he says to his daughter
  61. More about the hyena and its doings
  62. More about the jackal and its doings
  63. Moths coming to the fire of Bushmen by night foretell the killing of certain kinds of game
  64. Names of insects and notes on some of them (at the South African Museum)
  65. Names of plants and animals and notes on their use
  66. Note on lizards
  67. Notes on a bird (|kitten-|kitten)
  68. Parents instruct children how to get food, or, How D.H's father and mother instructed their children to get food
  69. Poisons and a description of gathering them
  70. Porcupine hunting: we go to sit waiting for a porcupine and some of the habits of the porcupine
  71. Porcupine's hole
  72. Regarding the living again of male ostriches
  73. September 1st, 1879, South African Museum (from !nanni and Tamme)
  74. Song of the !kan ||ka ||karashe
  75. Song of the sho sho
  76. Song of the ||ku
  77. Springbok ewes and lamb's cries
  78. Springbok horns
  79. Stars and death
  80. Swallows
  81. The !ka-ka |khueten (a spider)
  82. The !kabbi: a bird which has white legs and is eaten
  83. The !khou or water tortoise
  84. The !kuerre-!kuerre (a bird)
  85. The !kwana thorn tree
  86. The Anteater's laws (||kabbo's version 2)
  87. The Anteater, Springbok and Lynx (||kabbo's version 1)
  88. The Dzana
  89. The Ichneumon's discourse to the Mantis
  90. The Jackal and the Porcupine
  91. The Jackal's speech, or, the Jackals and a springbok which the Hyena takes away from them
  92. The Maiya
  93. The Mantis and Koro-tuiten
  94. The Phyllomorpha paradoxa (or withered-leaf insect)
  95. The Ttu ttutten (birds)
  96. The adhesive substance (|kwae) used in arrowmaking and its preparation for use
  97. The adventure of a girl, named Ttai-tchuen, with a lioness who had young cubs
  98. The avoidance of the name of the lion
  99. The bird called by the !kun Goba-|nua-me
  100. The children taught to use another name for the lion
  101. The coming of lion
  102. The coming of the Mantis [the mantis] to sit upon the quiver of the Bushman father at home foretells the shooting of a hartebeest
  103. The consequences of a woman's smelling fresh Ssho |oa scent
  104. The digging out of 'Bushman rice'
  105. The doings of a family of lions
  106. The doings of the jackals
  107. The gemsbok is a wind's thing
  108. The hyena
  109. The hyena carries ostrich meat home to his children and the jackal which picks the backbone
  110. The intelligence and timidity of the jackal
  111. The jackal watches the lion
  112. The kwa kwara, or korhaan malkop
  113. The lion and the giraffe
  114. The lion's dream
  115. The little elephant
  116. The little elephant (which fell into the game pit but did not die)
  117. The locust bird or ||kerri
  118. The man who sought refuge from the rain in a cave, and found a lion there before him
  119. The manner in which a man who is being cleansed, is prepared for drinking water
  120. The names of animals
  121. The owl and the black crow
  122. The porcupine eats ||kuarri
  123. The quagga is also a wind's thing
  124. The reason why the ostrich does not click
  125. The song of the !ke tsa'ba (a bird)
  126. The song of the !na !na'rishe (a bird)
  127. The song of the sauko
  128. The story of the Hyena (the Anteater's laws)
  129. The story of the Jackal (the Anteater's laws)
  130. The story of the Silver Jackal (the Anteater's laws)
  131. The story of the Strandwolf and the Aardwolf and how they each marry their own kind (the Anteater's laws)
  132. The telephonus (!koroken !koroken)
  133. The |ka kau: a little bird said by the Bushmen, by whom it is not eaten, to laugh at the wildcat
  134. The |khoro and the ≠gue-||na
  135. The |khuken-|u |unu
  136. The |nu'she, the tt' e, and the wind and rain
  137. The |nushe
  138. The |u' ||ke' or Tshaka
  139. The ||kerri (locust bird)
  140. The ||kerri bird and locusts
  141. The ||kerri: a bird which eats locusts; and locust-hunting
  142. The ≠xo gure bird
  143. Things eaten by the !kun
  144. Throwing stones at locusts
  145. Various foods and the protection of the rain for a fungus
  146. What the man does and says to the new Ssho |oa so that it may know him
  147. What the man says while cleansing himself
  148. What the owl says
  149. What the springbok and the gemsbok did when they knew that Dia!kwain's wife would die
  150. Wildcat turns into a lion
  151. Windmaking and springbok hunting
  152. Words and sentences given by |han≠kass'o
  153. Words and sentences: given by !nanni and Tamme
  154. Words and sentences: given by Piet Lynx
  155. Words and sentences: given by Tamme
  156. Words and sentences: given by Tamme
  157. Words and sentences: given by ≠kasin
  158. Words and sentences: names and descriptions of animals, and a song
  159. Words and sentences: names of animals given by Klaas Katkop (≠kasin), ||kabbo (Jantje) and |a!kunta (Stoffel)
  160. Words and sentences: names of animals given by Tamme at the museum
  161. Words and sentences: plants and animals
  162. Words and sentences: plants and animals
  163. Words and sentences: things belonging to different peoples in !nanni and Tamme's country, and plants and trees
  164. [Story about lions and korhaan malkop]
  165. |harritan, the locust bird
  166. |kai ka !gaoken, a poison used by 'Grass Bushmen'
  167. |u' ||ke' in food

Poetry

  1. A 'spelletje' or rhyme
  2. A song of the |kam-ssin !ku (or Sun Bushmen)
  3. A song sung by the star !gaunu, especially by the Bushman women
  4. Address or prayer to the star Canopus and the star Sirius
  5. Heron's song (The song of the Blue Crane)
  6. Jackal's song (and The song of the Caama Fox)
  7. Moon and stars: an incantation
  8. Old woman's song (2nd version)
  9. Prayer to a star
  10. Prayer to the young moon
  11. Prayers to the Moon
  12. Salutations to the sun and greetings to others
  13. Song of the !kan ||ka ||karashe
  14. Song of the !kau's child
  15. Song of the sho sho
  16. Song of the ||ku
  17. The !koa (or Muishond)
  18. The Cat's song
  19. The broken string
  20. The lion's song
  21. The old man's song (written again separately, from ≠girri-sse's dictation)
  22. The old woman's song
  23. The song of the !ke tsa'ba (a bird)
  24. The song of the !korro-ssin !ku (or Pit-making Bushmen)
  25. The song of the !na !na'rishe (a bird)
  26. The song of the Mother Rhinoceros
  27. The song of the Ngogan-a (a little bird)
  28. The song of the Springbok mothers
  29. The song of the kwa kwara, or korhaan malkop
  30. The song of the mother of the little buck
  31. The song of the sauko
  32. The song of the young woman, as she returned home
  33. The song of the ||gani (a bird)
  34. The song of the ||noruko djo-djo
  35. The song of the ≠na≠n'arro
  36. The song of the ≠ne≠nebbi (woodpigeon)
  37. What the lion says
  38. What the stars say
  39. Words and sentences
  40. Words and sentences: given by !nanni and Tamme
  41. Words and sentences: given by Tamme
  42. Words and sentences: given by Tamme
  43. Words and sentences: names and descriptions of animals, and a song
  44. Words and sentences: names of animals
  45. Young moon's story
  46. ||kabbo's song on the loss of his tobacco pouch

Portention

  1. !nanna-sse
  2. A Bushman belief about a moth called |goro, the coming of which to the fire at night foretells the slaying of an ostrich (or the finding of ostrich eggs) by one of the men
  3. A certain snake, which, by lying upon its back, announces a death in the family; and must not, in these circumstances, be killed
  4. A presentiment
  5. A small insect called !ka !karro, said to resemble the Moon, used by Bushmen women to ascertain if the men will bring food home
  6. A snake found near a grave
  7. An owl believed to foretell the coming of the lion
  8. Crows and a note on secretary birds
  9. Cuts to be made on a bow when a hyena has been killed
  10. Destroying the sneeze or kkoroken
  11. Earthquake
  12. Explanation of !hau-!hau (a hunting charm)
  13. Falling stars
  14. Gargling
  15. How the approach of a commando is foretold by the mist
  16. Karosses must not be beaten upon the ground, for fear of bad consequences
  17. Moths coming to the fire of Bushmen by night foretell the killing of certain kinds of game
  18. Picture of Mr Orpen's
  19. Pieces of wood for divining, or |xu
  20. Sneezing
  21. Stars and death
  22. The !ho and Ko-boken
  23. The !kwai !kwai, the Mantis and the children
  24. The Moon
  25. The coming of lion
  26. The coming of the Mantis [the mantis] to sit upon the quiver of the Bushman father at home foretells the shooting of a hartebeest
  27. The crying of the wind is an evil omen
  28. The crying of the wind tells beasts of prey where to find people
  29. The dream which Dia!kwain had before he received the tidings of the death of his father
  30. The lion's dream
  31. The locust bird or ||kerri
  32. The owl and the black crow
  33. The pieces of wood used by the Bushmen of !nanni's country for divining future events
  34. The springbok's story
  35. The telephonus (!koroken !koroken)
  36. We do not utter a star man's name
  37. What the springbok and the gemsbok did when they knew that Dia!kwain's wife would die
  38. Windmaking and springbok hunting

Relations with others

  1. !kotta-kkoe, his brother, ostrich eggs and Korannas
  2. !nanni's uncle
  3. !nuin-|kui-ten (who was a sorcerer or magician)
  4. A review on the parade
  5. Baboons and ||xabbiten ||xabbiten
  6. Chippings made by Dia!kwain's father (before the time of the 'Boers')
  7. Details about various people known by |han≠kass'o
  8. Different peoples and Bushmen in !nanni and Tamme's country
  9. Dorothea Bleek - Book BC151_A3_015
  10. Dorothea Bleek - Book BC151_A3_018
  11. Dorothea Bleek - Book BC151_A3_019
  12. Dorothea Bleek - Book BC151_A3_022
  13. Hai ||umm
  14. Hendrik (Ronebout) at Breakwater hospital
  15. How Korannas and the |xam cut themselves in order to shoot well
  16. How Tamme was taken by the Makoba and given to the Ovambo
  17. How the approach of a commando is foretold by the mist
  18. Jan Plat (at Breakwater; looked over later at Mowbray)
  19. Jan Plat's story about his brother Ruyter
  20. Kki-a-||ken who threw stones at swallows
  21. Koranna commando destroyed by ||ua
  22. Note on a certain man
  23. Notes on rock painting copy no. 2 (!nu'sa and other groups)
  24. Notes on rock painting copy no. 3
  25. Notes on rock painting copy no. 5, no. 6. and no. 7
  26. Notes on rock painting copy no. 9
  27. Notes to the story of The Wind
  28. Ostriches and barter
  29. Others living north of the Orange River
  30. Peoples of !nanni and Tamme's country
  31. Personal history of Jan Plat (he leaves Calvinia with Dia!kwain)
  32. Pieces of wood for divining, or |xu
  33. Pots and trading
  34. Sneezing: and searching for wives and families
  35. Tamme's family and their understanding of the languages spoken in their country
  36. The Korannas brought guns (while they felt that they had not a little cattle)
  37. The Makoba
  38. The Mantis takes away the Tick's sheep (including Porcupine's speech concerning the coming of ||khwai-hemm)
  39. The approach of strangers makes Bushmen sleepy
  40. The broken string
  41. The darkness
  42. The dream which Dia!kwain had before he received the tidings of the death of his father
  43. The eating of baboons
  44. The personal histories of various people
  45. The sending of the Crows, or, Crows sent out to look for husbands
  46. The springbok resemble the water of the sea
  47. The |xam and the Dutch
  48. Trading with the Makoba and elephant tusks
  49. Visit to Dr Stewart
  50. What Xaa-ttin used to sing (the broken string)
  51. Words and sentences: Koranna-|xam vocabulary
  52. Words and sentences: given by !nanni and Tamme in Mowbray
  53. Words and sentences: things belonging to different peoples in !nanni and Tamme's country, and plants and trees
  54. |gui-an (Dootje) and her mistress, Trina de Klerk
  55. |han≠kass'o's dream of a gang of prisoners
  56. |xam dialects ('Berg Bushmen' and 'River Bed people')
  57. |xam-speaking people
  58. |xue and his son
  59. |xue and his wives
  60. |xue, his father and changes
  61. |xue, ||namme, and the |nani, or, The |nani
  62. ||gan-a (spirits or dreams)
  63. ||kabbo (Jantje) in the train
  64. ||kabbo's (Jantje's) capture
  65. ||kabbo's account of being caught and brought to the Breakwater
  66. ||kabbo's account of being caught and jailed (2nd version)

The Rain and Rain's water

  1. A Rain story
  2. A girl does not eat porcupines' tails
  3. A note about the porcupine
  4. A note on ||kum'm or rain-clouds
  5. A yet unwritten story, about the Rain and one of the First Bushmen girls carried away by a whirlwind and who became a frog
  6. A young woman of the Early Race of people carried off by the Rain, in the shape of a bull
  7. About locusts
  8. About maidens and how they adorn young men with ||ka or 'rooi klip'
  9. About new maidens
  10. About new maidens (continued from Bleek's Book XXVII: p.2618)
  11. An account of the rain's things or !khoa ka ||kerri-ssi !kau
  12. Aquilae's water
  13. Clouds and wind
  14. Dead people are those who rode the Rain
  15. Dia!kwain plays the bow in a thunderstorm, or, The thunderstorm
  16. Dreams and rain
  17. Flood at Victoria West
  18. Horns burnt for rain
  19. How Xaa-ttin asked (or prayed to) the dead magician (named !nuin-|kui-ten) for rain, which was speedily bestowed
  20. How an old woman asked a chameleon for rain
  21. How the brother of the maiden taken up in a whirlwind became the Porcupine; followed by various remarks about porcupines
  22. Jackal clouds
  23. Kinds of rain
  24. Lightning which is black, it is that which kills us
  25. Locusts
  26. Method of cooking and eating porcupine
  27. Mode of addressing rain
  28. Notes on rock painting copy no. 8: the rain and the rain-bull
  29. People fear the darkness's rain
  30. Rain changes people into frogs
  31. Rain protects frogs
  32. Rain washes out a dead man's footsteps
  33. Rain's animals
  34. Rainmaking
  35. Rainmaking (a version by Dia!kwain)
  36. Rainmaking, when the wind is in the north
  37. Rainmaking: another story of it
  38. Remarks concerning copies of Bushman pictures nos. I-XXIV Collected By Mr H.C. Schunke, and deposited in the Grey Library
  39. Stars and death
  40. Swallows
  41. The !gixa (sorcerer) |kaunu
  42. The !khau lizard and the rainclouds - springbok hunting follows rain; and the song of the !khau lizard
  43. The !khou or water tortoise
  44. The !kuerri |nan and the rain
  45. The Rain's story, and |kannu the waterhole
  46. The Rain, in the form of an eland, shot by one of the Early Race of people; and the disasters which followed
  47. The Water's story: more about how maidens adorn young men
  48. The death of |kannu the Rain's man who was ||kabbo's person
  49. The girl of the Early Race who killed the children of the Rain
  50. The girl who snaps her fingers at her parents and the rain
  51. The hail is the rain's legs
  52. The maiden who snaps her fingers at the rain (and causes lightning)
  53. The maiden who was taken up in a whirlwind by the agency of the angry Rain and became a great snake
  54. The maiden's story; the frog's story
  55. The rain (and eating tortoises)
  56. The rain sorcerer ||kunn; two of ||kunn's children
  57. The rainmaker ||kunn
  58. The story of the old man who makes rain
  59. The |khuken-|u |unu
  60. The ||kerri: a bird which eats locusts; and locust-hunting
  61. Things girls and youths must avoid (the rain's things)
  62. Various foods and the protection of the rain for a fungus
  63. Want of rain
  64. What happened when the thong (with which they were pulling at the Water's Bull) broke or Kko-kkoro's story
  65. Why the chameleon must not be killed
  66. Wind, weather and springbok hunting
  67. Young unmarried women and girls must be silent and hide from the rain
  68. |kannu the rainmaker
  69. ≠kagara and !haunu
  70. ≠kagara's fight with !haunu in the east

Transformation

  1. !gaunu-tsaxau (the son of the Mantis), the Baboons, and the Mantis
  2. !nuin-|kui-ten (who was a sorcerer or magician)
  3. A wild cat, when many have been killed by a person changes itself into a lion and kills the slayer
  4. About new maidens (continued from Bleek's Book XXVII: p.2618)
  5. Further changes of |xue
  6. Gemsbok hunting
  7. How sorcerers sometimes assume the form of a jackal or of a bird; how they then act
  8. How the brother of the maiden taken up in a whirlwind became the Porcupine; followed by various remarks about porcupines
  9. Hu'-we (is |xue, and is a Bushman)
  10. Lion turns into a man
  11. Men enchanted by new maidens and changed into trees
  12. More about sorcerers
  13. More about |xue
  14. More about |xue
  15. Rain changes people into frogs
  16. The Bushman doctress and sorceress Ttanno !khauken
  17. The Day's Heart star child
  18. The Lion star and other stars
  19. The doings of |xue are many
  20. The lion has the power of turning itself into other things
  21. The maiden's story; the frog's story
  22. Wildcat turns into a lion
  23. Woman transformed into a lion
  24. |xue and a woman
  25. |xue and his child
  26. |xue and his father
  27. |xue and his father-in-law
  28. |xue and his mother and father
  29. |xue and his parents and child
  30. |xue and his son
  31. |xue and his wives
  32. |xue and the bam-bam, and as other things
  33. |xue and the ostriches
  34. |xue as !naxane and butterflies and with people who are afraid
  35. |xue as a buffalo
  36. |xue as a ||gui tree and a fly
  37. |xue as ostrich and other things
  38. |xue as tchaxa
  39. |xue becomes !naxane
  40. |xue is a spirit, and kills his child
  41. |xue, his father and changes
  42. ||kabbo's place

Words and sentences

  1. A 'spelletje' or rhyme
  2. A few words, names, etc., obtained from Blaitje Snell and Daoud Moos (chiefly the former); from Stuurman's, and Thier Fontein
  3. Amsterdam Battery, near Cape Town: July 15/79
  4. Birds and bird's eggs
  5. Dorothea Bleek - Book BC151_A3_001
  6. Dorothea Bleek - Book BC151_A3_002
  7. Dorothea Bleek - Book BC151_A3_003
  8. Dorothea Bleek - Book BC151_A3_004
  9. Dorothea Bleek - Book BC151_A3_005
  10. Dorothea Bleek - Book BC151_A3_007
  11. Dorothea Bleek - Book BC151_A3_008
  12. Dorothea Bleek - Book BC151_A3_009
  13. Dorothea Bleek - Book BC151_A3_010
  14. Dorothea Bleek - Book BC151_A3_012
  15. Dorothea Bleek - Book BC151_A3_013
  16. Dorothea Bleek - Book BC151_A3_014
  17. Dorothea Bleek - Book BC151_A3_015
  18. Dorothea Bleek - Book BC151_A3_020
  19. Dorothea Bleek - Book BC151_A3_021
  20. Dorothea Bleek - Book BC151_A3_023
  21. Dorothea Bleek - Book BC151_A3_024
  22. Dorothea Bleek - Book BC151_A3_027
  23. Dorothea Bleek - Book BC151_A3_028
  24. Dorothea Bleek - Book BC151_A3_029
  25. Dorothea Bleek - Book BC151_A3_030
  26. Dorothea Bleek - Book BC151_A3_031
  27. From 'Jan Plat' at Charlton House, Mowbray
  28. From 'Philip' June '77 at Grey Library
  29. Greetings among the Bushmen (and times of the day)
  30. Intelligent and foolish people
  31. Jantje (||kabbo) at museum. May 30 /71 (names of animals)
  32. Jemima Bleek's 'Hottentot' interviews, 1879
  33. Jemima Bleek's interviews with !nanni and Tamme, September to November 1879
  34. Koranna words with |xam and English translations
  35. Men who run away fear greatly (on courage and cowardice)
  36. Names of seasons
  37. Notes on clicks
  38. Notes on |xam
  39. Personal history of Hendrick Beren and some words
  40. Relationships
  41. Relationships and other words (words and sentences)
  42. September 1st, 1879, South African Museum (from !nanni and Tamme)
  43. Some Bushman words to be translated (L.C. Lloyd, June, 1913)
  44. Terms for being alive or not quite dead
  45. The Hare, |xue, the Antelope and the Bushman: a creation legend
  46. The father-in-law and the mother-in-law
  47. The names of a few places in Bushmanland, told to me long ago by Jantje Tooren and put in here for safety
  48. The names of stones
  49. Untranslated page of Lloyd's script in Bleek's Book XXIV
  50. Word lists, including 'Bushman/Hottentot' vocabulary
  51. Words and sentences
  52. Words and sentences
  53. Words and sentences
  54. Words and sentences
  55. Words and sentences
  56. Words and sentences
  57. Words and sentences
  58. Words and sentences
  59. Words and sentences
  60. Words and sentences
  61. Words and sentences
  62. Words and sentences
  63. Words and sentences
  64. Words and sentences (and Dia!kwain's father's drawings)
  65. Words and sentences (dictionary and genealogies)
  66. Words and sentences (given by Adam Kleinhardt)
  67. Words and sentences (given by |a!kunta)
  68. Words and sentences (including a note on |xue)
  69. Words and sentences (including the names of stars)
  70. Words and sentences given by |han≠kass'o
  71. Words and sentences given by |han≠kass'o at the South African Museum
  72. Words and sentences given by |han≠kass'o at the South African Museum
  73. Words and sentences given by |han≠kass'o: names of colours and patterns
  74. Words and sentences given by |han≠kass'o: parts of the body
  75. Words and sentences: Boer's [Dutch] names for sheep
  76. Words and sentences: Da, May 1880
  77. Words and sentences: Kareebergen Stuurmansfontein dialect
  78. Words and sentences: Koranna-|xam vocabulary
  79. Words and sentences: Kronlein
  80. Words and sentences: Mkuan at the Breakwater
  81. Words and sentences: at the Museum, 24 September 1880 (!nauxa and !khannumup)
  82. Words and sentences: by !kweiten ta ||ken
  83. Words and sentences: given by !nanni and Tamme
  84. Words and sentences: given by !nanni and Tamme in Mowbray
  85. Words and sentences: given by Auma (Hottentot, Namaqua and Setschuana)
  86. Words and sentences: given by Griet
  87. Words and sentences: given by Piet Lynx
  88. Words and sentences: given by Piet Lynx
  89. Words and sentences: given by Piet Lynx
  90. Words and sentences: given by Piet Lynx
  91. Words and sentences: given by Piet Lynx
  92. Words and sentences: given by Piet Lynx
  93. Words and sentences: given by Piet Lynx
  94. Words and sentences: given by Piet Lynx
  95. Words and sentences: given by Piet Lynx
  96. Words and sentences: given by Tamme
  97. Words and sentences: given by Tamme
  98. Words and sentences: given by ≠girri-sse
  99. Words and sentences: given by ≠kasin
  100. Words and sentences: given by ≠kasin (Klaas Katkop)
  101. Words and sentences: given by ≠kasin (Klaas Katkop) and Dia!kwain (David Hoesar)
  102. Words and sentences: got at Breakwater
  103. Words and sentences: names and descriptions of animals, and a song
  104. Words and sentences: names of animals
  105. Words and sentences: names of animals
  106. Words and sentences: names of animals (at the South African Museum)
  107. Words and sentences: names of animals and other terms relating to daily life
  108. Words and sentences: names of animals given by Klaas Katkop (≠kasin), ||kabbo (Jantje) and |a!kunta (Stoffel)
  109. Words and sentences: names of animals given by Tamme at the museum
  110. Words and sentences: names of bird's eggs
  111. Words and sentences: names of bones
  112. Words and sentences: names of colours
  113. Words and sentences: names of millipedes
  114. Words and sentences: parts of the body
  115. Words and sentences: parts of the body
  116. Words and sentences: parts of the body
  117. Words and sentences: plants and animals
  118. Words and sentences: plants and animals
  119. Words and sentences: plants and animals
  120. Words and sentences: plants and animals (and avoiding the lion's name)
  121. Words and sentences: regarding the expressions |guobba ||a, and !kwiten ||a (as applied to the flight of bees)
  122. Words and sentences: some questions
  123. Words and sentences: terms for various relationships by marriage
  124. Words and sentences: the door is shut
  125. Words and sentences: things belonging to different peoples in !nanni and Tamme's country, and plants and trees
  126. Words and sentences: times, country and language
  127. Words and sentences: various expressions for being angry
  128. Words and sentences: |a!kunta (Stoffel) in the museum (names of animals)
  129. Words and sentences: |uma and Da at Mowbray
  130. Words and sentences: |uma at Mowbray, May 1880
  131. Words and sentences: |xam names of animals
  132. Words given by Da
  133. Words in the dialect of the !kun or so-called 'Ongova Bushmen' of Hereroland
  134. Words in the dialect of the !kun or so-called 'Ongova Bushmen' of Hereroland

|kaggen (the Mantis)

  1. !ga ka Kkumm. The Frog's story (Or, The Frog, the Blue Crane, the Beetle, and !kuommain |ka ||kau) (Part I)
  2. !gaunu-tsaxau (the son of the Mantis), the Baboons, and the Mantis
  3. A mother's prohibitions with regard to the hartebeest and her child
  4. A note to the story of The !kwai !kwai, the Mantis and the children
  5. About the Mantis
  6. Doings of the Mantis when the eland has been wounded
  7. Further adventures of the Mantis and !goe !kweitentu
  8. Further adventures of the Mantis and the Cat
  9. Further ceremonies in cutting up eland
  10. How an Elephant steals a young Springbok from |kaggen (the Mantis) or Pet Springbok carried off by an Elephant
  11. How the Blue Crane vainly sought for !kuommain |ka ||kau, was killed and eaten by the Lions, and restored to life by means of one of the bones of the Mantis (Part 2)
  12. How the Ichneumon discovered what the Mantis did with the honey
  13. How the Ichneumon discovered what the Mantis did with the honey (a second 'right' version)
  14. Rainbow (|kaggen and !kwammana)
  15. Regarding the children of the Mantis
  16. Story of |kua ka khumm
  17. The !kwai !kwai, the Mantis and the children
  18. The Cat's song
  19. The Ichneumon rebukes the Mantis for his ill deeds
  20. The Ichneumon's discourse to the Mantis
  21. The Ichneumon's speech when |kaggen (the Mantis) had taken away the Meerkats' possessions
  22. The Lizard, the Mice and the Mantis (includes the song of the Agama lizard)
  23. The Mantis - giver of names to places
  24. The Mantis and !goe !kweitentu
  25. The Mantis and !goe !kweitentu
  26. The Mantis and !kaken-!kaka-!k'aui (another version)
  27. The Mantis and Koro-tuiten
  28. The Mantis and the Cat
  29. The Mantis and the Great Tortoise
  30. The Mantis and the Ticks
  31. The Mantis and the Ticks
  32. The Mantis and the hunting of eland
  33. The Mantis and |kwammana visit the Dassie's house
  34. The Mantis and ||khwai-hemm
  35. The Mantis makes an eland
  36. The Mantis pretends he has left one of his veldschoens behind and becomes a Lion
  37. The Mantis takes away the Tick's sheep (including Porcupine's speech concerning the coming of ||khwai-hemm)
  38. The Mantis turned into a hartebeest
  39. The Mantis, his wife and their things
  40. The Mantis, the Ichneumon and |kammanga go to Lion's house
  41. The Mantis, the Mice and the Beetle
  42. The Wildebeest, the Mice, the Quaggas and the Mantis, or why the (black) Wildebeest has a white or light coloured tail
  43. The children are sent to throw the sleeping Sun into the sky
  44. The hartebeest and the eland belong to the Mantis
  45. The hartebeest resembles the Mantis
  46. The monster ||khwai-hemm's speech
  47. The monster ||khwai-hemm's speech to the Mantis and the Mantis's reply
  48. The names of |kaggen's wife, son and daughter
  49. The origin of the Moon
  50. The reasons for the colours of the gemsbok, the hartebeest, the eland, the quagga, and the springbok
  51. The story of the Mantis and the Ostrich who talks (|kaggen and !kaken-!kaka-!k'aui)
  52. The story of the Springbok's kid, who was carried off by the Elephants (an incomplete account)
  53. The |kaggen who took |kammanga's shoe, and turned it into an eland
  54. The |kain |kain, the girls and the Mantis
  55. What |kaggen does when an eland has been shot
  56. When Bushmen were springbucks and cried
  57. |kaggen (the Mantis) and the Moon (version 1)
  58. |kaggen (the Mantis) and the Moon: creation of the latter (version 2)
  59. |ku-te-!gaua and |kaggen
  60. |kuamman-a, accompanied by the Mantis and the young Ichneumon, visits the house of the |ku, or, The Mantis and the Proteles