| Page |
| Hariwali and the wonderful tree | 120 |
| The story of Haburi | 122 |
| The adventures of Kororomanna | 126 |
| The sun, the frog, and the firesticks (Warrau) | 130 |
| The sun, the frog, and the firesticks (Carib) | 133 |
| The sun, the frog, and the firesticks (Makusi) | 135 |
| The origin of the Caribs (Warrau) | 143 |
| The origin of the Caribs (Carib) | 144 |
| The first fruit trees (Arawak) | 146 |
| The first fruit trees (Carib) | 147 |
| The man with a bad temper | 150 |
| The sorcerer's daughter | 151 |
| The idiot who wanted to fly | 166 |
| The Maihisikiri changes the woman into a bush spirit | 172 |
| The man who always hunted scrub-turkey | 173 |
| The shrewd little boy and the hebu | 174 |
| The spirit's brain and the goat-sucker | 175 |
|
p. 110
| Page |
| The mutilated husband is made whole | 177 |
| How pain, misery, and death came into the world | 179 |
| Why the drink turned sour | 180 |
| Why children become sick and cry | 181 |
| The woman killed by her husband's spirit | 182 |
| The result of stealing other people's property | 183 |
| The man changed into a beast | 184 |
| The man who dined after dark | 184 |
| How the haimara came to have such fine big eyes | 185 |
| The wrong rattle, the bush-hog, and the baby | 186 |
| The killing of the bush spirit and his wife | 188 |
| The woman kills the hebu | 189 |
| The bush spirit and the pregnant woman | 189 |
| The contented and happy son-in-law | 190 |
| The bush spirit tricked while hunting frogs | 191 |
| Mawári and tobacco smoke | 192 |
| The bush spirit with big ideas | 193 |
| The woman who mimicked the bush spirit | 194 |
| The danger of associating with spirits | 195 |
| The rain-frog wife | 198 |
| The honey-bee son-in-law | 199 |
| The man who was changed into a powis | 201 |
| The stolen child | 202 |
| The tiger changed into a woman | 203 |
| The woman in love with a sloth | 204 |
| Why honey is so scarce now | 204 |
| The man who claimed the tiger's meal | 205 |
| The woman who battled with two tigers | 205 |
| The man with a vulture wife | 206 |
| The man with a baboon wife | 209 |
| The disobedient son killed by a tiger | 210 |
| Don't count your chickens before they are hatched | 211 |
| The biter bit | 211 |
| How alligator came to have his present shape | 212 |
| How the birds obtained their distinctive markings | 212 |
| The deer and the turtle | 212 |
| Black tiger, wau-uta, and the broken arrow | 213 |
| The story of Adaba | 215 |
| Why the Indians killed Black Tiger | 215 |
| Bravery rewarded with a wife | 216 |
| Why Black Tiger killed the Indians | 217 |
| Bá-mu [Bahmoo] and the frog | 218 |
| How the man fooled the tiger | 218 |
| The search for the stone ax | 220 |
| The Huri Fish Nation | 220 |
| How the ant-eater fooled the man | 220 |
| How the Indians learned to paddle | 221 |
| The big bats | 221 |
| The magic boat | 222 |
| The Amazons | 222 |
| The country of the stone adzes | 223 |
| How turtle fooled the Yawarri | 223 |
| How the turtle tricked the tiger | 223 |
| Tiger and ant-eater | 225 |
|
p. 111
| Page |
| How birds got their present plumage | 225 |
| Hunting is no part of woman's work | 226 |
| How the tapir punished the Indian | 226 |
| The turtle and the aruresso bird | 226 |
| Sisters bush-cow (tapir) and water-cow (manati) | 227 |
| The first makuari whips | 228 |
| The spirit of the rot saves the young woman | 231 |
| The ite palm and the mora tree | 232 |
| The piai in the water spirit's belly | 244 |
| Sisters porpoise and sea-cow | 245 |
| The fisherman's water-jug and potato | 245 |
| How the water spirit got the man's wife from him | 247 |
| How the water woman secured a landsman for husband | 248 |
| The moon-sick girl and the water spirit (Carib) | 248 |
| The moon-sick girl and the water spirit (Warrau) | 249 |
| How sickness and death came into the world | 250 |
| Amanna and her talkative husband | 251 |
| The story of Okoó-hi | 255 |
| How the moon got his dirty face | 256 |
| The legend of Bat Mountain | 259 |
| The babracote and camudi | 261 |
| The legend of the Seven Stars | 262 |
| The story of Nohi-abassi | 263 |
| The legend of Serikoai | 265 |
| The Woman of the Dawn | 266 |
| The obstinate girl who refused the old man | 272 |
| How the little boy escaped from the Caribs | 273 |
| The night-owl and his bat brothers-in-law | 276 |
| The candle-fly saved the lost hunter | 277 |
| The wife teaches her husband to hunt | 279 |
| The bina, the resurrected father, and the bad girl | 286 |
| The baboon cough | 292 |
| "Shut your eyes and wish" | 301 |
| The lucky pot | 302 |
| Honey-bee and the sweet drinks | 305 |
| A warning to wives | 316 |
| The broken egg | 323 |
| The little bush child | 326 |
| The hummingbird with tobacco for the first piai | 334 |
| Komatari, the first medicine-man | 336 |
| Saved by a dream | 342 |
| The medicine-man and the carrion Crows | 343 |
| The story of Koneso (Brer Rabbit) | 372 |
| The woman and the serpent Oroli | 378 |
| The piai and the Earthquake People | 378 |
| How the lazy man was cured | 380 |
| Always be content | 380 |
| The old woman who died of shame | 381 |
| The man who interfered with his brother's wife | 381 |
| The old blind man who wanted a woman | 382 |
| How we beat the Caribs | 383 |